Baby Boy's :)

A list of name's that my Husband and I are seriously considering for our future children. We love unique, uncommon, nature and word names.
  1. Amaziah
    • Bently
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Bentley
      • Description:

        No matter how you spell it, we're ready for this trendy name to pass.
    • Bramwell
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "well where the gorse grows"
      • Description:

        The only boy in the Brontë family; the name has a lonely Wuthering Heights/Jane Eyre feel.
    • Caedin
      • Dallas
        • Origin:

          Place-name in Scotland and Texas, and Irish
        • Meaning:

          "skilled"
        • Description:

          Relaxed, laid-back cowboy name with broad appeal and more staying power than you might guess: Dallas has ranked among the Top 1000 boy names in the US since records began in 1880.
      • Dalton
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "the settlement in the valley"
        • Description:

          Dalton is a name with multi-faceted appeal. Many are attracted to the name's resemblance to other two-syllable n-ending favorites: Colton, Holden, and cousins. Others see it as a trendy Western name, recalling the legendary Dalton Brothers gang. It also has something of an upscale, preppy feel connected to the exclusive New York private school.
      • Evander
        • Origin:

          Scottish; Greek
        • Meaning:

          "bow warrior; strong man"
        • Description:

          Evander is a name that could build on the popularity of shorter form Evan, and could work and play well with schoolmates like Zander and Xander.
      • Harlan
        • Origin:

          German and English
        • Meaning:

          "rocky land"
        • Description:

          Pleasant but uninspired surname name somewhat connected to writers Ellison and Coben. After three decades off the US Top 1000, it reentered in 2013, maybe because it's an unusual example of the trendy class of two-syllable n-ending boys’ names. Kevin Harlan is an NFL, NBA, and college basketball announcer for TV and radio.
      • Huxley
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "inhospitable place"
        • Description:

          Huxley is definitely rising as a surname name, with its X that makes almost any name cooler. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2015. The modern nicknames Hux and Huck certainly don't hurt.
      • Harlow
        • Jace
          • Origin:

            Hebrew, diminutive of Jason
          • Meaning:

            "the Lord is salvation"
          • Description:

            Jace may sound like only half a name -- it's usually pronounced like the first half of Jason though some may consider it a spelling-out of the initials J. C. -- but it's a popular choice for baby boys. Jace has been heard on such TV shows as Teen Mom 2 and Duck Dynasty.
        • Jessen
          • Maverick
            • Origin:

              American
            • Meaning:

              "independent, nonconformist"
            • Description:

              It's ironic that the name Maverick is not such a maverick anymore. Heard first in a 1950s James Garner western TV series, and then as the Tom Cruise character in Top Gun, Maverick symbolizes an unfettered, free spirit.
          • Myall
            • Preston
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "priest's estate"
              • Description:

                Britney Spears put this old-fashioned surname name back on the map when she chose it as her son Sean's middle name, which the family uses as his first.
            • Quinciy
              • Seth
                • Origin:

                  Hebrew
                • Meaning:

                  "appointed, placed"
                • Description:

                  The long-neglected name of Adam and Eve's third son after Cain and Abel, Seth is appreciated for its gentle, understated presence -- and strong middle-name potential. It reached a high of Number 63 in the year 2000.
              • 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.
              • Theo
                • Origin:

                  Diminutive of Theodore
                • Meaning:

                  "gift of God"
                • Description:

                  See the popularity graph below for the name Theo? It's been heading straight uphill since 2010, when it hopped back onto the Top 1000 after a 60+ year absence.