Neat Names For My Games

  1. Bellamy
    • Origin:

      English and Irish from French
    • Meaning:

      "fine friend"
    • Description:

      Bellamy is emerging as an up-and-coming girls' name, an Irish surname-y riff on the super-popular Bella series of names. While the Bella connection makes Bellamy sound a little trendier and more popular than it really is, we see the name possibly rising through the ranks for both genders in the coming years.
  2. Bowie
    • Origin:

      Scottish
    • Meaning:

      "blond"
    • Description:

      Baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn put this name in play as a first name, but David Bowie (born with the considerably less marketable moniker of David Robert Jones) dyed it blond and gave it charisma. He changed his surname in 1965 to avoid confusion with the then popular Davy Jones of The Monkees, and especially since his death, his admirers have seen it as an increasingly viable baby name namesake.
  3. Breaker
    • Origin:

      English word name
    • Description:

      One of the aggressive new boys' names, ala Tracker and Heller, that have become fashionable among parents who are courting trouble.
  4. Buffy
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Elizabeth
    • Description:

      Buffy was a one-time sorority girl with a roommate named Muffy, then a fearless vampire slayer, though still basically fluffy. You might think of Buffy as the feminine version of Chip or Bud -- an all-purpose nickname now buried in a mid-century time capsule.
  5. Banshee
    • Briares
      • Caelan
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "slender"
        • Description:

          An Anglicized form of Caolán
      • Calloway
        • Origin:

          English from Latin
        • Meaning:

          "pebbly place"
        • Description:

          Calloway is one of those irresistibly jaunty, animated three-syllable surnames, like Sullivan and Finnegan — but this one has the added attraction of jazzy ties to the immortal "Dean of American Jive," Cab Calloway.
      • Calypso
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "she who hides"
        • Description:

          This hyper-rhythmic name has two evocative references. In Greek mythology, she was an island nymph, a daughter of Atlas, who delayed Odysseus from returning home. It is also a genre of West Indian music, originating in Trinidad and Tobago and largely popularized in the States by Harry Belafonte.
      • Cascade
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Description:

          It's a nature name evocative of rushing waterfalls. But also a dishwashing detergent.
      • Cerulean
        • Origin:

          Color name
        • Description:

          Cerulean is just beginning to be heard as a name. Though Cerulean works as a name for both genders; the fact that it's a majestic light blue makes it particularly appropriate for a boy.
      • 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.
      • Clarence
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "bright"
        • Description:

          The name of the guardian angel in It's a Wonderful Life is rarely heard the rest of the year because of its studious, near-nerdy image, but this could change in the current naming climate.
      • Corbett
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "raven"
        • Description:

          This British surname has a somewhat aristocratic air, which ties in to its association with the early American boxing champ "Gentleman Jim" Corbett. CORBIN, which has the same meaning, is slightly more user friendly.
      • Cormac
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "charioteer"
        • Description:

          Both offbeat and upbeat, this evocative traditional Irish name that runs through Celtic mythology is known here via award-winning novelist Cormac McCarthy (born Charles). The author's adopted name is related to Cormac Mac Airt, one of the great legendary high kings of Ireland.
      • Caliber
        • Chaos
          • Daedalus
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "craftsman"
            • Description:

              Name of a tragic mythological hero, used as a surname in the works of James Joyce; heavy but ponderous for an American boy, though pulled off very well by single-name musician Daedalus and writer and artist Daedalus Howell.
          • Dante
            • Origin:

              Latin diminutive of Durant
            • Meaning:

              "enduring"
            • Description:

              Though closely associated with the great medieval Florentine poet Dante Alighieri -- who's so famous most people skip the last name -- it's not as much of a one-man name as you might think. Heck, it's not even a one-poet name, thanks to British pre-Rapahaelite Dante Gabriel Rosetti. Though especially well used in the Italian-American community, it would make a striking name for any little boy.
          • 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.