New Baby

  1. Aitan
    • Bail
      • Baird
        • Origin:

          Scottish occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "minstrel, poet"
        • Description:

          Meaning bard, this is an original choice with poetic and melodic undertones. Bard itself has also come into consideration, both names bringing to mind Shakespeare and other literary lights.

          The Scottish surname Baird's most notable bearer was John Logie Baird, the Scottish engineer and inventor of the televisor, the world's first practical television system in 1926, and also the world's first fully electronic color TV tube two years later. Some might also remember puppeteers Bil and Cora Baird.

      • CRIX
        • Etan
          • Origin:

            Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "strong, firm"
          • Description:

            This Hebrew form of Ethan is commonly heard in Israel. Other forms are Eitan and Eytan
        • Fenix
          • FENN
            • Holden
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "hollow valley"
              • Description:

                Holden is a classic case of a name that jumped out of a book and onto birth certificates--though it took quite a while. Parents who loved J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye are flocking to the name of its hero, Holden Caulfield -- not coincidentally in tune with the Hudson-Hayden-Colton field of names. (Trivia note: Salinger supposedly came up with the name while looking at a movie poster promoting a film starring William Holden and Joan Caulfield, though other sources say he was named after Salinger's friend Holden Bowler.) Another impetus was provided by a soap opera character introduced in 1985.
            • 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.
            • KANTUS
              • Kit
                • Origin:

                  English, diminutive of Christopher
                • Meaning:

                  "bearer of Christ"
                • Description:

                  Actor Kit Harington, aka the dreamy Jon Snow on Game of Thrones, has given this nickname-name new style and appeal for boys. Actress Jodie Foster used it for her son.
              • Locke
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "enclosure or fortified place"
                • Description:

                  Usually adding an e to the end of a name makes it more feminine, but Locke is at most recent count used only for baby boys. Still, this stylishly strong one-syllable name is theoretically gender-neutral.
              • REVAN
                • Talon
                  • Origin:

                    French word name
                  • Meaning:

                    "large claw of a bird of prey"
                  • Description:

                    Despite its somewhat menacing meaning, this name has been widely used in recent years, probably due to the appeal of its trendy on ending.
                • Theron
                  • Origin:

                    Greek
                  • Meaning:

                    "hunter"
                  • Description:

                    Theron is best known these days as the surname of actress Charlize, but it does have a long history as a first name, ranking in the Top 500 in the early part of the 20th century and only dropping out of the Top 1000 in the early 1990s. Theon is a similar name made familiar by the popular series Game of Thrones: Might it and Theron rise in tandem?
                • Tycho
                  • Origin:

                    Greek
                  • Meaning:

                    "hitting the mark"
                  • Description:

                    Tycho and Tychon are Greek names with modern variations such as the Danish Tyge, the Swedish Tyko, and the Dutch Tygo that are popular throughout modern Europe. Tycho was the name of a Greek saint and a Danish astronomer.