Favorite Names/Guilty Pleasures (Boys)

  1. Lee
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "pasture, meadow"
    • Description:

      A name that has a bit of a shouldn't-I-be-a-middle-name sound, though still in use as a first for both genders. Lee might be a good choice if you want something that sounds at once traditional yet modern, unisex but not newly-minted.
  2. Leeland
    • Leif
      • Origin:

        Scandinavian
      • Meaning:

        "heir, descendant"
      • Description:

        Leif is one of the most recognizable Scandinavian names, thanks to Icelandic explorer Leif Erikson, and is still one of the best, with a pleasant aural association with the word leaf.
    • Owen
      • Origin:

        Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "young warrior; well-born"
      • Description:

        Owen, a resonant Celtic name, has ranked among the Top 100 boys' names in the US for 20 years and is now at its highest point ever.
    • Rosario
      • Origin:

        Italian
      • Meaning:

        "rosary"
      • Description:

        Virtually the only name that is feminine in one language and masculine in another.
    • Sawyer
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "woodcutter"
      • Description:

        Sawyer is a surname with a more relaxed and friendly feel than many others, and is one of the hottest occupational names right now, with the Nameberry seal of approval. Sawyer is becoming one of the top unisex names. Both Sara Gilbert and Diane Farr used Sawyer for their daughters, while it was given a boost as a boys' name by the character Sawyer on Lost, an alias for the character really named James Ford.
    • Seamus
      • Origin:

        Irish variation of James
      • Meaning:

        "supplanter"
      • Description:

        Parents who have tired of Sean are now contemplating Seamus, the Irish form of James, which has a lot more substance and verve.
    • Severus
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "stern"
      • Description:

        Though it has literary credentials--making an appearance in Jane Austen's Mansfield Park and as the mean-spirited teacher Severus Snape in the Harry Potter books, most modern parents would find it too--well--severe.
    • Sherlock
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "fair-haired"
      • Description:

        If ever there was a one-person name, it's probably Sherlock. But Sherlock Holmes the character has arguably never been hotter: he's been played by Robert Downey Jr., Ian McKellen, Jonny Lee Miller and, most memorably, Benedict Cumberbatch, in various film and TV adaptations over the last few years. So you never know.
    • Soren
      • Origin:

        Danish, Norwegian
      • Meaning:

        "stern"
      • Description:

        This gentle Scandinavian name, soft and sensitive, is being discovered in a major way by parents in the US. It's most closely identified with the nineteenth century philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, but there have been modern fictional Sorens as well, in The Matrix Reloaded and the book series Guardians of Ga'Hoole, Charlie and Lola, and Underworld.
    • Shasta
      • Victor
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "conqueror"
        • Description:

          Victor is one of the earliest Christian names, borne (as Vittorio) by several saints and popes, symbolizing Christ's victory over death. It has been quietly in the Top 200 since 1880, but just recently has taken on a cool edge by fashionable parents in London and seems ripe for a similar reevaluation here too.
      • Valtinen
        • Westley
          • Origin:

            Variation of Wesley
          • Description:

            This variation of Wesley moved into the Top 1000 among boys' names in the US in 2016, perhaps because it makes the name less like Lesley and more Western, with the cowboy nickname West.