| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| toliver | Olive tree / olive planter (associated with the olive as a symbol of peace) | English | Boy | — | |
| Toll | Likely from an occupational surname meaning 'toll' (a tax or fee) or a shortened form of a longer name such as Tolliver; in modern German 'toll' colloquially means 'great'. | English, German, Scandinavian | Boy | — | |
| Tomalyn | A modern blend of Thomas ('twin') and Lyn ('lake' or 'Lynn'), roughly 'twin' or 'twin by the lake'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Tomalynn | Combination of Thomas ('twin') and Lynn ('lake' or 'pool') - loosely 'twin by the lake' or 'twin of the water'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Tomieka | Feminine form/variant of Thomas - 'twin'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Tomika | Possibly 'twin' (from Thomas) or 'wealthy child' (from Japanese Tomiko); used as a modern feminine name | English | Girl | — | |
| Tompall | Diminutive of Thomas - 'twin' (used as 'little Tom') | English | Boy | — | |
| Tonae | Derived from Antonia/Antonius - often interpreted as "priceless" or "of inestimable worth." | English | Girl | — | |
| Tonelle | Diminutive of Antonia/Anthony - 'little Antonia'; traditionally associated with 'priceless' or 'highly praiseworthy' | English | Girl | — | |
| Tookie | An affectionate diminutive with no independent etymological meaning; often used as a pet form of names such as Tucker, Antoine, or Antoinette. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Toots | Affectionate pet name meaning 'darling' or 'little one'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Top | Top - the highest point; best, foremost; can be a playful nickname | English | Unisex | — | |
| Toppin | Originally a surname; likely denotes someone who lived 'at the top' (of a hill) or a nickname meaning 'little/top one'. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Toralei | A modern blend generally interpreted as 'tiger/Thor' + 'meadow/garland' (e.g., 'tiger garland' or 'Thor's meadow'); chiefly a melodic invented name | English | Girl | — | |
| Toralyn | Modern coined name often interpreted as 'related to Thor/thunder' or simply 'Tora + Lyn' | English | Girl | — | |
| Toralynn | Blend of Tora (linked to Thor - 'thunder' or 'Thor's warrior') and Lynn ('lake' or 'water') - often interpreted loosely as 'thunder of the lake' or 'strong lake.' | English | Girl | — | |
| Torieanna | Victory + grace (roughly "victorious grace") | English | Girl | — | |
| torrel | 'from the rocky hill' or 'of the tower' | English, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Torrelle | From the tower; often interpreted as "little tower" | English, French | Unisex | — | |
| Torria | Likely 'victorious' (from Victoria) or 'of the hill' (from torr) | English | Girl | — | |
| Tossy | An affectionate diminutive or pet name; no widely established independent meaning | English | Girl | — | |
| Totie | Little one; pet name/diminutive | English | Girl | — | |
| Touch | From the English word 'touch' - contact or sensation of touch; connotes sensitivity, affection, or a delicate impression. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Toy | Plaything; delight; playful | English | Unisex | — | |
| Toya' | Commonly a diminutive of LaToya or Toyin; associated meanings include "praiseworthy" or "worthy of praise" (from Yoruba Oluwatoyin). In other contexts it can be a place-derived Japanese name. | English, Japanese, Yoruba | Girl | — | |
| Toye | In Yoruba usage, typically means 'worthy of praise' or 'to be praised'; as an English surname it has no specific given-name meaning. | English, Norman, Yoruba | Unisex | — | |
| Traccey | 'Warlike, fighter' (from Gaelic treasach); also derived from a place name | English | Girl | — | |
| Tracee | Derived from Ó Treasaigh: 'descendant of Treasach' - Treasach meaning 'warlike, fighter'. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Tracey-Lee | Tracey: 'warlike' or 'from Thrace' + Lee: 'clearing, meadow' (combined meaning: 'warlike/from Thrace of the meadow') | English, Irish | Girl | — | |
| Tracey-Lynn | Combination of Tracey (associated with a place-name or strength/fighter) and Lynn (lake/pond), roughly "strength/warrior by the lake" | English, Irish, Welsh | Girl | — | |
| Tracey-May | Combination of Tracey ('from the place of Thracius') and May ('born in May' / related to the Roman goddess Maia') | English, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Tracii | Associated with 'warlike' or 'fighter' - 'descendant of a warrior' | English | Unisex | — | |
| Track | Path, trail or course; can imply following or pursuit | English | Unisex | — | |
| Tracyanne | Combination of Tracy (a Norman/French surname/place-name) and Anne (Hebrew for 'grace'); often interpreted as 'graceful strength'. | English, French, Hebrew | Girl | — | |
| traesten | Likely derived from Tristan - often interpreted as 'sorrowful' or 'sad', though original Celtic roots are uncertain | English | Boy | — | |
| Tramain | Likely 'from the settlement' - derived from Cornish tre- 'settlement' (place-name origin). | English | Boy | — | |
| Transgender | Literally 'across/beyond gender'; describes a person whose gender identity differs from their assigned sex. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Trap | A device or snare for catching; figuratively an ambush or trick. Also slang (e.g., a place where illicit activity occurs). | English | Unisex | — | |
| Trapp | Occupational name meaning 'trap setter' or 'trapper'. | English, Germanic | Boy | — | |
| Trav | Short form of Travis - 'to cross' or 'crossing' | English | Boy | — | |
| travain | No established traditional meaning; a modern invented name, typically interpreted as a variation of Travon/Traven | English | Boy | — | |
| Traveller | One who travels; a traveler or journeyer. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Traveris | Derived from Travers/Travis - 'to cross' or 'one who crosses' | English | Boy | — | |
| Travina | Probably a modern feminine elaboration meaning 'female form of Travin' - commonly interpreted as 'traveler' or 'of the homestead' depending on etymological influence. | English | Girl | — | |
| Travy | Derived from Travis/Travers: 'to cross' or 'one who crosses; from the crossing' | English | Boy | — | |
| Traydon | Modern American name; likely a variant of Braden/Brayden meaning 'broad valley' (alternatively interpreted as Trey + don: 'Trey's hill' or 'three-hill'). | English | Boy | — | |
| Traye | Third; associated with the number three | English | Boy | — | |
| Traylor | From Trelly | English, Norman French, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Traysa | No established historical meaning; likely a modern elaboration. If derived from Tracy, relates to a place/Thracius; if influenced by Teresa, 'harvester'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Treat | Special gift or snack | Anglo-French, English, Latin | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Canada for every English-origin name in our dataset.