Great G Names

  1. Gabriel
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "God is my strength"
    • Description:

      Gabriel has become a biblical favorite, an angelic choice that's lighter and less patriarchal than some of his Old Testament brethren. Derived from the Hebrew name Gavri’el, Gabriel is taken from the elements gever, meaning "strong," and ’el, in reference to God.
  2. Gael
    • Origin:

      Welsh
    • Meaning:

      "wild"
    • Description:

      Now that the midcentury sound-alike name Gail for girls is sailing out to sea, Gael is becoming an increasingly popular name for boys -- and could make the gender switch in the opposite direction again.
  3. Garren
    • Origin:

      Invented name
    • Description:

      Though it's a new name, sounds almost as dated as GARY and DARREN.
  4. Gemma
    • Origin:

      Italian
    • Meaning:

      "precious stone"
    • Description:

      Gemma is a jewel of a name, an Italian classic that was very popular in 1980s England, but has only recently been started to be used here; it entered the list in 2008.
  5. Genevieve
    • Origin:

      English from French
    • Meaning:

      "tribe woman"
    • Description:

      Genevieve is derived from the Germanic medieval name Genovefa, or Kenowefa, which consists of the elements kuni, meaning "kin", and wefa, meaning "woman." The medieval saint Genevieve, patroness of Paris, defended the city against Attila the Hun through her rational thinking, courage and prayer.
  6. George
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "farmer"
    • Description:

      Iconoclasts though we may be, we like Fred, we like Frank, and we like George, which was among the Top 10 from 1830 to 1950, when the number of little Georges started to decline. Solid, strong, royal and saintly, yet friendly and unpretentious, we think that George is in prime position for a comeback, especially since it was chosen by Britain's royal couple.
  7. Gilly
    • Origin:

      Literary name
    • Description:

      Gilly is a name that's popped up from time to time in different contexts: As a nickname for Gillian, for instance, and as the name of a town in Switzerland. But it's increasingly associated with Hannah Murray's character Gilly in HBO's Game of Thrones, whom Sam Tarly rescued from Craster's Keep.
  8. Ginette
    • Ginger
      • Origin:

        English diminutive
      • Description:

        Originally a unisex nickname for a redhead -- red hair is called "ginger" in Britain -- or for the name Virginia, Ginger perennially wears pink gingham and spike heels.
    • Ginny
      • Origin:

        English, diminutive of Virginia, American place-name and Latin
      • Meaning:

        "virginal"
      • Description:

        Ginny was more common before Jenny and its myriad variants came along.
    • Giotto
      • Origin:

        Italian variation of Godfrey or Geoffrey
      • Meaning:

        "pledge of peace"
      • Description:

        This appealing Italian name is associated with the great Florentine painter and architect Giotto di Bondone, a major force in the Italian Renaissance.
    • Giulia
      • Origin:

        Italian variation of Julia
      • Meaning:

        "youthful"
      • Description:

        An Italian version of an English classic beginning to be adopted by cutting-edge American parents, including Entourage's Debi Mazar.
    • Golden
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        Like Silver, a shimmering metallic color name, almost too dazzling for an ordinary boy.
    • Goldie
      • Origin:

        Anglicized form of Yiddish Golde or Golda
      • Description:

        More Sadie than Sadie, this old canasta player--somewhat modernized and energized by Goldie Hawn--looks like it could be making a comeback. It was recently chosen for her daughter by Ione Skye and Ben Lee, as well as by shoemeister Steve Madden.
    • Grace
      • Origin:

        English, virtue name
      • Description:

        Grace, a simple and pure virtue name which originally referred to divine grace, is a fashionable classic. In the early 2000s, it seemed headed for the Top 10 but pulled back from the upward trajectory, which you may consider a very good thing.
    • Gracie
      • Origin:

        English, diminutive of Grace
      • Description:

        Cute Gracie is one of the more recently revived nickname names by parents who chose it over the more formal Grace--or variations like Graziella or Grania. Country singers Faith Hill and Tim McGraw cut straight to the nickname when they called one of their daughters Gracie, and actors Ron Livingston and Rosemarie DeWitt named their newborn daughter Gracie James. Gracie Gold is a popular young figure skater.
    • Graham
      • Origin:

        Scottish
      • Meaning:

        "gravelly homestead"
      • Description:

        Well used in England and Scotland since the fifties, the smooth and sophisticated Graham is catching on here.
    • Grayson
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "the son of the bailiff"
      • Description:

        Grayson, which you might think of as a Jason-Mason substitute, has been rising through the US Top 1000 since 1984 and has ranked in the Top 100 since 2011.
    • Gregorio
      • Origin:

        Italian variation of Gregory
      • Meaning:

        "vigilant, a watchman"
      • Description:

        More dramatic, worldly, and energetic spin on Gregory.
    • Griffin
      • Origin:

        Welsh, variation of Griffith
      • Meaning:

        "strong lord"
      • Description:

        Griffin is one of the newer and most appealing of the two-syllable Celtic surnames. In English, griffin is the name of a mythological creature, half eagle, half lion. It re-entered the list in 1983 after an absence of 75+ years.