Discover and Shortlist Your Perfect Baby Names!

English Boy Names

Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Baeddan Likely 'battle-man' or 'warrior' (man associated with battle) English Boy
Baedon Modern invented name; meanings vary by root - possible 'from the broad valley' (if linked to Braden) or influenced by Aiden's 'little fire' English Boy
Baedyn Variant of Braden/Brayden, commonly given as "broad valley" (also associated with Irish "bradan" meaning "salmon") English Boy
Bainard Brave/strong as a bear English Boy
Bainbridge From the village of Bainbridge - 'bridge over the River Bain' / dweller at Bainbridge English Boy
Bainebridge From a place name meaning "Bain's bridge" or "bridge associated with Bain" English Boy
Bairden Derived from 'Baird' meaning 'bard' or 'poet' - roughly 'descendant/son of a bard' or 'little bard' English, Scottish Boy
Balard Possibly 'bald' (surname origin) or, by derivation, 'bold/brave'. English, French Boy
Baldhere Bold army (born of elements bald “bold” + here “army”) English, Germanic Boy
Baldred Bold counsel English Boy
Baldryc Bold ruler English, Germanic Boy
Balds Bold, brave English Boy
Baldwyn Bold friend; brave protector English Boy
Baldwynn From Old English elements 'beald' (bold) + 'wine' (friend) - 'bold/brave friend'. English, Germanic Boy
Ballerd Derived from a surname meaning "bold" or historically "bald-headed"; connotes bravery and leadership. English, Germanic Boy
BamBam Repeated impact sound English Boy
Bamm From the onomatopoeic 'bam' meaning a loud impact or strike; used as a playful nickname or given name English Boy
Bancrofft From Old English elements meaning 'croft' (small enclosed field) by a 'bank' - essentially 'dweller by the croft on a bank or riverbank.' English Boy
Bancroft Locational name meaning 'croft (small enclosed field) by a bank' - someone who lived by a small field on a riverbank or slope. English Boy
Bandy Originally an English surname/nickname (possibly referring to bowed legs or a band/stripe); also used as a shortened form of the Bengali surname Bandyopadhyay and as a pet form of Benedek (Benedict). English Boy
Banet Most commonly 'blessed' (if derived from Benet/Benedict/Bennett); alternatively 'little ban' or associated with a noble/governor (if from South Slavic 'ban'). Catalan, English, Latin Boy
Banjaman A contemporary invented name; most likely a playful or descriptive form meaning 'banjo player/man' or a creative variant of Benjamin. No established traditional meaning. English Boy
Bankroft From bank (riverbank) + croft (small enclosed field) - dweller by the bank and small field English Boy
Barber Occupational name for someone who cuts hair or shaves beards (from Latin 'barba' = beard) English Boy
Barde Bard - poet, minstrel, storyteller English, French, Gaelic, Scottish Boy
Bardi Multiple possible origins: Albanian from 'bardh'/'Bardhi' meaning 'white'; Italian as a toponymic surname meaning 'from Bardi' (a town in Emilia‑Romagna); or related to 'bard' meaning 'poet' / Scandinavian form of Bård. Albanian, Celtic, English, Italian, Scandinavian Boy
Bardick Little bard; diminutive of 'bard' (poet/minstrel) English, Scottish Boy
Bardin "Little bard" or descendant/son of a bard - poet/minstrel English, French Boy
Bardolfe From Old Norse elements meaning "beard" + "wolf" (literally "beard-wolf" or "bearded wolf") English, Norse Boy
Bardrick Poet-ruler (bard + ruler) English Boy
Bardryck Poet-ruler or bard-king - a leader who is also a poet English Boy
Bardryk Poet-ruler or chief of bards (probable) English Boy
Bardyn Young bard; little poet; son of a bard English Boy
Baret Multiple possible origins - often associated with 'bear/strength' or from Old French meaning related to a cap/strife; exact meaning uncertain English, Norman French Boy
Barham Hill homestead English Boy
Barington 'barley farm' or 'barley town' (settlement associated with barley) English Boy
Barkclay Birch wood; clearing near birch trees English, Scottish Boy
Barklay Birch clearing; from the birch wood English Boy
Barklie Birch wood / birch clearing English, Scottish Boy
Barkly Birch wood; clearing where birch trees grow English Boy
Barnadine Probably a variant of Bernard/Barnaby - associated with 'brave/strong as a bear' (from Bernard) or linked to Barnabas/Barnaby English Boy
Barnet From the place-name Barnet meaning 'land cleared by burning'; sometimes treated as an Anglicized form related to Bernard ('bear-brave') English Boy
Barnett Originally an English locational surname meaning 'from Barnet' - a place name from Old English meaning 'land cleared by burning'; also used as an Anglicized Jewish family name. English Boy
Barnham From Old English Beorn + hām 'homestead' - 'Beorn's homestead'; alternatively interpreted as 'homestead with barns' English Boy
Barnhart From German Bernhard: 'bear-brave' - brave/strong as a bear English, German Boy
Barnum Barley homestead; someone from Barnham English Boy
Barrclay Birch wood / birch clearing English, Scottish Boy
Barre Meanings vary by origin: from French 'barre' meaning 'bar' or 'barrier'; alternatively associated with Barry-type names in Irish/English; also appears as a Somali personal name/surname. English, French, Irish, Somali Boy
Barrhett A modern blended name suggesting strength/brightness (from Barrett) possibly combined with 'counsel' (from Rhett) English Boy
Barrit Likely a variant of the surname Barrett, often interpreted as 'bear strength' or 'mighty as a bear'; can also reflect a Danish place-name origin. Danish, English, Irish Boy

English Boys name popularity over time

Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Canada for every English-origin name in our dataset.

5,565
Names in this origin
125
With data in 2025
3,202
Births 2025
496,739
Peak year 2015