Titles as Boy Names

  1. Abbot
    • Baron
      • Origin:

        English word name
      • Meaning:

        "a lord of the realm"
      • Description:

        If you're going to choose a noble word name, why not aim higher and pick Duke, Prince...or King. The Donald Trumps picked the Barron spelling for their little princeling.
    • Bishop
      • Origin:

        English occupational name
      • Description:

        Reese Witherspoon's Deacon has opened this churchy direction for occupational names. It reentered the US Top 1000 in 2015.
    • Bailiff
      • Brigadier
        • Chancellor
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "chief secretary"
          • Description:

            Of the names derived from titles, this is one of the least obvious (unless you are of German extraction). Chancellor also has the attraction of offering the exciting - and very on-trend - nickname Chance.
        • Deacon
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "messenger, servant"
          • Description:

            This name was transposed from the word for a church officer to a baby name when Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe chose it for their son, after a baseball player ancestor, and Don Johnson followed suit. Its popularity also got a boost from Nashville character Deacon Claybourne -- only to fall a bit in recent years.
        • Dean
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "church official"
          • Description:

            Dean may sound to some like a retro surfer boy name, but it is once again climbing up the popularity chart in the USA. For decades it was associated with Dean (born Dino) Martin; more recent representatives include Dean Cain, Dean McDermott and Dean Koontz -- not to mention Jared Padalecki's dreamy Dean Forester in Gilmore Girls.
        • Duke
          • Origin:

            English rank of nobility
          • Description:

            While John Wayne and Duke Ellington are worthy role models, the reason Duke is currently enjoying a revival and returned to the Top 1000 in 2013 as one of the year's fastest-rising boys’ names is more likely due to the name given to high-profile TV couple Giuliana and Bill Rancic. Christened Edward Duke, he has always been called by his middle name, just as Edward Duke Ellington was. Duke is just one of several aristocratic titles being increasingly used by ordinary citizens.
        • Earl
          • Origin:

            English aristocratic title
          • Description:

            Earl is a title name - brought to England by the vikings - that's out of fashion right now, unlike King and Duke. Its peak popularity was in the 1920s, which gives it a dusty great-grandpa feel, but there are also younger Earls in pop culture, like the reformed criminal in "My Name is Earl".
        • Friar
          • Judge
            • Origin:

              Word name
            • Description:

              Eighties star Judge Reinhold (born Edward Jr. , he was given this nickname at the age of two weeks) made this possible, but it could cause a lot of confusion.
          • Justice
            • Origin:

              English word name
            • Meaning:

              "the quality of being just, impartial, or fair"
            • Description:

              Justice, one of the rare virtue names for boys, entered the popularity ranks in 1992, and has remained on the list ever since. Parents' search for names implying virtue has led to a mini-revival of this long-neglected name in both its German homonymic form, Justus, and as the word itself. Steven Seagal was ahead of the curve when he used it back in 1976.
          • Marshall
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "one who looks after horses"
            • Description:

              Marshall is an occupational surname, not having to do with anything military or martial, but stemming from the Norman French for someone caring for horses. It's been used as a first name since the nineteenth century and has been on the Social Security list since it started to publish its data in 1880.
          • Mayor
            • Parson
              • Origin:

                English occupational name
              • Meaning:

                "clergyman"
              • Description:

                The name Parson might have seemed ridiculous even a few years ago, but when Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe named their son Deacon, they opened up a whole new field of ecclesiastical cool. Bishop, Priest, and Pastor are other possibilities.
            • Prince
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "chief, prince"
              • Description:

                Prince rose to its highest ranking in a century in 2015, and the tragic death of its most famous bearer in April 2016 propelled it even higher. The Purple Rain legend isn't its only tie to pop royalty: Michael Jackson chose it for not one but two of his sons. Royal names such as King and Prince, once thought of as canine, have begun to be used by human non-royals for their sons.
            • Ranger
              • Origin:

                French
              • Meaning:

                "forest guardian"
              • Description:

                The list of occupational boys' names continues to expand, and this is one of the latest to ride onto the range. And, as trends collide, it also has the popular western, cowboyish feel. A much better choice than the increasingly (and scarily) heard Danger.
            • Sheriff
              • Steward