Discover and Shortlist Your Perfect Baby Names!

English Boy Names

Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Godwen Friend of God / God's friend English Boy
Godwine Friend of God English Boy
Godwinn Friend of God / God's friend English Boy
Godwyn 'friend of God' (from Old English elements 'god' + 'wine') English Boy
Godwynn Friend of God English Boy
Golding From Old English 'gold' - originally a patronymic or byname meaning 'descendant of Golda' or someone associated with gold; 'golden' or 'gold-worker' English Boy
Goldwin Golden friend English Boy
Goldwine Gold (golden) friend English, Germanic Boy
Goldwinn Golden friend English Boy
Goldwyn Gold friend / golden friend English Boy
Goodfellow Good companion; friendly, affable person English Boy
Goodluck Good fortune English Boy
Goodmen Good man; man of good character English Boy
Goodwill Good intention English, Zulu Boy
Goodwin Originally 'friend of God' or 'God-friend'; also interpreted as 'good friend' English Boy
Goodwine From Old English elements meaning 'good' or 'God' + 'friend' - 'good friend' or 'friend of God'. English Boy
Goodwyn Good friend (also sometimes interpreted as 'friend of God' when derived from Godwine) English Boy
Gore 'Triangular piece of land or cloth' (originally a topographical surname) English Boy
Gorry Surname origin; if derived from Gregory, meaning 'watchful, vigilant' English, Irish Boy
Gower From Gower (the peninsula in Wales); a habitational name English, Welsh Boy
Gradon Likely 'gray hill' or 'gray settlement' (locational surname) English Boy
Graeghamm Modern variant of Graham - 'gray/gravel homestead' (homestead by gravel). English, Scottish Boy
Graeham From Grantham - 'gravelly homestead' / 'gray homestead' English, Scottish Boy
Graehame From the place name Grantham - 'homestead on the River Granta' English, Scottish Boy
Graem Gravelly homestead (from the place-name Grantham); 'gray home' English, Scottish Boy
Graent Great, large - related to the name Grant English, Scottish Boy
Grahame From Grantham; "gravelly homestead" or "grey/gray village/home" English, Scottish Boy
Grahem From Grantham; often interpreted as 'gravelly homestead' or 'homestead by the River Granta' English, Scottish Boy
Graheme Gravelly homestead English, Scottish Boy
Grahme From the place name Grantham - 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray home' English, Scottish Boy
Grahym Originally a place-name meaning 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray homestead'. English, Scottish Boy
Graiam From the place Grantham - generally rendered as a homestead/place name (often given as 'Granta's homestead' or 'gravelly homestead') English, Scottish Boy
Graidey Noble, illustrious (from Irish Grady); can also evoke 'gray' by sound English Boy
Graiham Gravel homestead (gravelly village or settlement) English Boy
Graihame From the gravelly homestead English, Scottish Boy
Grandy Likely 'great' or 'grand' (from English 'grand') or a surname-derived name; may carry influence of Irish 'Grady' ('noble') English Boy
Grantlan From 'Grant' (large/gift) combined with '-lan' (possibly 'land' or a form of Alan) - roughly 'gifted land' or 'Grant + Lan' (modern coinage). English Boy
Grantland Surname-derived given name meaning 'Grant's land' or 'large land' English Boy
Grantlie From a place name meaning 'Grant's clearing' or 'great/large clearing' English Boy
Grantly From the gravelly clearing (from the place name Grantley) English Boy
Granvil From the large town or estate English Boy
Granvyl From a place name meaning 'large town' or 'great estate' English, French Boy
Granvyll From Granville - 'large town' (from French grand 'large' + ville 'town') English, Norman French Boy
Granvylle From Norman French 'grand ville' meaning 'large town' or 'great estate' English Boy
Graydi Derived from Ó Grádaigh meaning 'noble' or 'illustrious'; sometimes associated with the English word 'gray'. English, Irish Boy
Grayham From Grantham; 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray/gravelly home' English, Scottish Boy
Grayhame Gravel homestead; popularly interpreted as 'gray homestead' English Boy
Greely Dweller at or from the gravelly clearing/meadow English Boy
Greggson Son of Gregg (Gregory) - 'watchful, vigilant' English Boy
Grendel Name of the monstrous antagonist in Beowulf; broadly 'monster' or of uncertain/possibly fierce/storm-related meaning English 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