Oz - Beyond Oscar and Oswald

More interesting ways to achieve the nickname Oz.
  1. August
    • Origin:

      German form of Latin Augustus
    • Meaning:

      "great, magnificent"
    • Description:

      The name August is at its highest point since the 1890s, when it ranked among the Top 100 boy names in the US. And deservedly so, given its great meaning, historic roots, and cool nicknames.
  2. Boaz
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "swiftness"
    • Description:

      Now that such Old Testament patriarchs as Elijah and Moses fill the playground, Boaz seems downright baby-friendly, having more pizzazz than many of the others, perhaps as a successor to Noah.
  3. Berlioz
    • Osiris
      • Origin:

        Egyptian
      • Meaning:

        "with strong eyesight"
      • Description:

        Osiris is the name of Egyptian mythology god-king who died and was reborn every year. Emerging from centuries of obscurity, Osiris has several ingredients for success in the modern world: Roots in ancient myth, an uplifting meaning, an s ending and the cute nickname Os or Oz.
    • Otto
      • Origin:

        German
      • Meaning:

        "wealthy"
      • Description:

        Otto is cool again. Long a quintessential Old Man Name, Otto has been promoted to trending darling of adventurous baby namers.
    • Ozias
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "salvation"
      • Description:

        Everyone says they want an unusual name — well, if you truly do, this is one with Biblical cred that fits the bill, with the added attraction of the user-friendly nickname of Oz or Ozzie. Ozias is the name of several minor figures in the Bible. Osias is another spelling.
    • Osprey
      • Otto Zikora
        • Ozark
          • Prosper
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "favorable, prosperous"
            • Description:

              In France, pronounced PRO-spare, Prosper is a fairly common name; here it presents a worthy aspirational message for a child.
          • Roscoe
            • Origin:

              Norse
            • Meaning:

              "deer forest"
            • Description:

              Fairly popular a hundred years ago but out of sight now, the quirky Roscoe deserves a place on every adventurous baby-namer's long list. It joins Rufus, Roman, Remy, Romulus, and Ray as one of the R names that sound fresh again after too many years of Robert, Richard, and Ronald.
          • Socrates
            • Origin:

              Greek philosopher; uncertain derivation
            • Description:

              Quite common in traditional Greek families, but for others, we think Plato might be easier to handle.