| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gormen | From Irish Gormán, diminutive of gorm meaning 'blue' or 'dark' - 'little blue/dark one'. | Gaelic, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Gormfhlaith | "blue sovereign" or "blue princess" (from gorm = blue + flaith = sovereign/prince/princess) | Irish, Irish (Gaelic) | Girl | — | |
| Gormflaith | Blue sovereign / blue princess (from gorm 'blue' + flaith 'ruler, sovereign') | Irish, Irish (Gaelic) | Girl | — | |
| Gormghlaith | Blue princess (from gorm 'blue' + flaithe/flaith 'ruler, sovereign, princess') | Irish | Girl | — | |
| Gormlaith | From Irish gorm 'blue' + flaith 'ruler/prince/princess' - 'blue princess' or 'blue sovereign'. | Irish | Girl | — | |
| Gormley | Descendant of a person named from gorm ('blue') - 'descendant of the blue one.' | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Gormly | Derived from an Irish surname likely from the Gaelic element 'gorm' meaning 'blue' or 'dark' - roughly 'descendant of the blue/dark one'. | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Gorrie | Descendant of Goraidh (Gaelic form of the Norse name Guðrøðr/Godred) | Irish, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gorry | Surname origin; if derived from Gregory, meaning 'watchful, vigilant' | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Govan | Smith (craftsman) | Irish, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gowan | From Gaelic for 'smith' or 'little smith'; in Scots also 'daisy' | Irish, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gradye | Derived from the Gaelic Ó Grádaigh, generally interpreted as 'noble' or 'renowned'. | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Graidee | Derived from Grady: "noble" or "illustrious" | Irish | Girl | — | |
| Graidy | Noble, illustrious, renowned | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Graydi | Derived from Ó Grádaigh meaning 'noble' or 'illustrious'; sometimes associated with the English word 'gray'. | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Graydie | Derived from Irish Gráda meaning 'noble' or 'illustrious' | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Graydy | Noble, renowned | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Greid | No established historical meaning; may be a variant of Reid ('red-haired') or an invented name without a traditional meaning | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Grianne | Likely 'grain' (corn); sometimes interpreted in folk etymology as 'love' or 'charm'; name of a legendary Irish heroine | Irish | Girl | — | |
| Grimes | Originally a surname from Old Norse Grímr meaning 'masked' or 'helmeted' (often interpreted as 'fierce'); also an Anglicized Irish family name. | English, Irish, Norse | Unisex | — | |
| Griorgair | Watchful, alert, vigilant | Irish, Scottish Gaelic | Boy | — | |
| Guban | Somali: 'burnt' or 'scorched' and the name of a hot coastal plain. Irish (Gubán): attested in the legendary craftsman Gubán Saor, associated with building/smithing (etymology uncertain). | Irish, Somali | Boy | — | |
| Gubnat | 'little smith' (diminutive of Goban, related to 'smith') | Irish, Irish (Gaelic) | Girl | — | |
| Guire | From the Gaelic byname Ó Mág Uidhir / Mag Uidhir - 'descendant/son of Odhar' (Odhar = 'dun, sallow') | Irish | Boy | — | |
| Gylan | Uncertain - generally treated as a modern or variant name. May be influenced by names like Dylan (associated with the sea) or Giles (from Aegidius, 'young goat'), but no single established meaning. | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hacket | Originally a surname meaning 'little axe' (Old French) or 'son of Eachaidh' (Eachaidh from Gaelic meaning 'horseman'). | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hagin | From Hebrew 'Haggai' meaning 'my festival' or 'festive'; also linked to Irish 'Hagan' meaning 'young hawk' or 'descendant of Aodhagán'; and related to Germanic 'Hagen' meaning 'enclosure' or 'protector'. | Gaelic, Germanic, Hebrew, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hagon | Probably related to Irish Ó hAodhagáin meaning 'descendant of Aodh' (Aodh = 'fire') - i.e., 'little fire' or 'son of Aodh' ; alternatively may derive from Old English 'haga' ('enclosure'). | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Haidin | Derived from a surname meaning 'hay valley' or 'hay hill'; occasionally associated with the Irish family name Ó hÉideáin | English, Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Haidn | From the hay-filled valley | English, Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Hallin | Possibly 'from the hall' or 'rock/hill' - alternatively 'little rock' depending on root | Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Hamell | Uncertain; surname-based - possibly related to a homestead/place name or from Old English 'hamel' ('crooked'); meaning varies by origin. | French, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hamil | From Arabic ḥāmil meaning 'bearer, carrier'; also used as a surname-derived given name in English/Irish contexts. | Arabic, English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hammil | Originally a surname - likely 'descendant of Amhal' (an old Gaelic personal name) or from Middle English 'hammel' meaning 'wether' (ram); used as a given name in modern times. | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hanely | Possibly from the Irish surname meaning 'descendant of Áinle' or linked to Hannah meaning 'grace'; also used as a modern invented/variant name. | English, Hebrew, Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Haney | Originally a surname-turned given name. In Irish contexts it likely denotes 'descendant of Éignach/Éanna' (exact root uncertain). It is also phonetically similar to Hani, which in Arabic means 'happy/delighted', and to Hebrew names related to 'God has favored'. | English, Hebrew, Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Hanly | Derived from the Irish surname Ó hÁinle, meaning "descendant of Áinle" (Áinle is an old Gaelic personal name). | Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Hann | Varies by origin - from Hebrew 'grace' or 'favor' (via Hannah); from Germanic forms of Johannes 'God is gracious'; in Korean meanings depend on the hanja used for 한. | English, Germanic, Hebrew, Irish, Korean | Unisex | — | |
| Hannraoi | Ruler of the household | Irish, Scottish Gaelic | Boy | — | |
| Hare | English: 'hare' (rabbit). As a surname: anglicized Irish family name. In devotional/Sanskrit context: vocative address of Hari/Hara ('O Hari' - an appeal to the divine). | English, Irish, Sanskrit | Unisex | — | |
| Harkyn | Probably 'descendant of Earcán' (Irish) or figuratively 'listener' (from English 'hark') | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Haydun | Either 'hay hill'/'hay valley' (Old English) or 'little fire' (from Irish Aodhán) | Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Healy | Derived from a Gaelic surname meaning 'descendant of the ingenious/artful one'. | Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Hewney | Likely 'descendant of Hugh' or related to Irish Eoghan/Owen ('born of the yew'/'young'); generally connected to meanings of Hugh ('mind, heart, spirit') | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Heydun | Probably a modern variant of Hayden/Haydn - a place-name associated with 'hay' or a 'hedged/valley' location; precise meaning uncertain | Irish | Unisex | — | |
| Heydyn | Variant of Hayden/Haydn - 'hay valley' or 'descendant of Éideán' (little fire) | English, Irish | Boy | — | |
| Hiberninah | From Hibernia - 'of Ireland' (also connoting winter in Latin) | Irish | Girl | — | |
| Hiolair | Eagle | Irish, Scottish Gaelic | Boy | — | |
| Holanah | Unknown/uncertain; possibly related to 'holly', 'happiness/beauty', or (if Hawaiian-influenced) a sense of movement/drifting | Gaelic, Irish | Girl | — | |
| Honoura | Honour, dignity | Irish | Girl | — |
Aggregated births across Ireland, United Kingdom, United States, Australia for every Irish-origin name in our dataset.