MY NAMES!!

these r my names im considering and/or using i guess. can't believe i can't put a heart emoji in the title... homophobic /j
  1. Alistair
    • Origin:

      English spelling of Alasdair, Scottish version of Alexander
    • Meaning:

      "defending men"
    • Description:

      With many British names invading the Yankee name pool, the sophisticated Alistair could and should be part of the next wave. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2016. You have a triple choice with this name--the British spell it Alistair or Alastair, while the Scots prefer Alasdair--but they're all suave Gaelic versions of Alexander. Adopted by the lowland Scots by the seventeenth century, the name didn't become popular outside Scotland and Ireland until the twentieth century.
  2. Ephraim
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "fruitful, fertile, productive"
    • Description:

      Ephraim is an Old Testament name we would place high on the list of neglected Biblical possibilities, solid but not solemn.
  3. Enji
    • Ignis
      • Isol
        • Jasper
          • Origin:

            Persian
          • Meaning:

            "bringer of treasure"
          • Description:

            Jasper originated as a variation of the Latin Gaspar, which ultimately derived from the Persian word ganzabara, meaning "bringer of treasure." As a given name, Jasper’s etymology is unrelated to that of the gemstone, which comes from a Semitic word meaning "speckled stone." Jasper is the usual English form for one of the Three Wise Men who brought gifts to the infant Christ according to medieval tradition and appears in the Bible as a reference to the stone itself in Revelations 4:3.
        • Lucien
          • Origin:

            French form of Lucian
          • Meaning:

            "light"
          • Description:

            Sophisticated Gallic version of Lucian, Lucien may appeal to parents attracted to this meaning over that of Lucas and Luke, which have a different root, and also looking for a more unusual choice.
        • Lecter
          • Ved
            • Origin:

              Sanskrit
            • Meaning:

              "sacred knowledge"
            • Description:

              Literary Indian choice, best known here via acclaimed writer Ved Mehta, who lost his sight at the age of four.
          • Vis