| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fulgentius | Bright, shining | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fulke | From a Germanic root meaning "people" (often rendered as "people's ruler" or "chieftain") | Germanic, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fulvi | From Latin fulvus, meaning 'tawny', 'golden-haired' or 'blond'. | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fulvia | Tawny, reddish-yellow; golden‑haired | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Fulvie | From Latin fulvus 'tawny, reddish-yellow' - 'tawny-haired' or 'golden-haired'. | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Fulvio | Derived from Latin fulvus meaning 'tawny', 'yellowish', 'golden' or 'blond'. | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fulvius | From Latin fulvus, 'tawny; yellowish-brown, blond' | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fulvy | Tawny, reddish-yellow; golden or reddish-brown-haired | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Fulvya | Tawny, reddish-yellow; golden-haired | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Fumia | Uncertain; possibly 'writing/literature' (if derived from Japanese 'Fumi') or 'smoke' (if from Latin/Italian roots); also used as a modern invented name | Italian, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Furina | Name of an ancient Roman goddess associated with springs and water - 'of the spring' / water goddess | Latin, Roman | Girl | — | |
| Fusee | Derived from French fusée meaning 'rocket' (originally 'spindle'); evokes propulsion, motion, speed | French, Latin | Unisex | — | |
| Futura | The future; relating to things yet to come | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Fylburt | From elements filu ('much') + berht ('bright'): 'very bright'. Also associated with the hazelnut through the name Filbert. | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fylyx | Happy, fortunate, lucky | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Fyrmin | Firm, steadfast, strong | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gaetan | From Gaeta | French, Italian, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gaetanne | From Gaeta (Caieta) | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gai | Depends on origin: Thai - commonly a nickname meaning 'chicken' (ไก่) or from กาย 'body'; Chinese - meaning varies by character (e.g., 盖 Gài 'cover'); English - can be a form of Gaye/Gail (Old French gai 'joyful') or short for Gaia ('earth') or Gaius. | Chinese, English, Latin, Thai | Unisex | — | |
| Gaios | From a Latin root meaning 'rejoice' or 'merry' | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gaitanah | From Gaeta (a coastal town in Italy) | Italian, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gaitann | From Gaeta | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Galam | Son of Calum | Latin, Scottish Gaelic | Boy | — | |
| Galea | Multiple possible origins - from Latin 'galea' meaning 'helmet'; from Galilee (Hebrew/Aramaic) meaning 'of Galilee'; or used as a feminine form/variant of Gail/Abigail ('my father's joy'). | Aramaic, English, Hebrew, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Galeazzo | Helmeted | Italian, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Galerius | ‘Of the Galeria family’ - indicating membership in the Galeria clan; exact lexical meaning unclear. | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Galeus | Derived from Greek for 'shark' or 'dogfish' (Latinized); occasionally associated with Latin 'galea' meaning 'helmet' in some interpretations | Greek, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gall | Originally a Gaelic byname meaning "foreigner" or "stranger"; also associated with Gaul/Gaulish in Latin-derived forms. | English, Irish, Latin, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Galla | From Latin Gallus - originally 'a person from Gaul' / 'Gaulish'; also 'rooster' in Latin | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gallea | Helmet (protective headpiece) | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Galli | Multiple possible origins: (Italian/Latin) from gallus 'rooster' or a surname; (Hindi) 'alley, lane'; (Hebrew Gali) 'my wave' / related to 'Gal' (wave). | Hebrew, Hindi, Italian, Latin | Unisex | — | |
| Gallia | Of Gaul; 'from Gaul' or 'Gaulish' (also related to Latin Gallus, meaning 'a Gaul' or 'rooster') | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gallie | Often a diminutive of Gail/Abigail ('my father rejoices') or derived from Gaelic 'Gall' meaning 'stranger, foreigner'. | English, Gaelic, Irish, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gallienus | Connected with Gaul | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gallina | Hen (female chicken) | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gallio | Derived from Latin 'Gallus', meaning 'a Gaul' (person from Gaul) or 'rooster'. | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gallus | From Latin gallus, 'rooster'; also used to mean 'a Gaul' (person from Gaul). | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Galtero | Ruler of the army | Italian, Latin, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Gasparda | Treasurer, keeper of treasure | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gaspare | Treasurer; keeper of treasure | Italian, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gaton | Rare name with uncertain meaning; possibilities include 'cat' (if from Spanish gato) or 'man from Gascony' (if related to Gaston). | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gavilla | Possibly "sheaf" or "bundle" (Spanish); alternatively, if related to Gabriel forms, a feminine variant implying "God is my strength." | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gavrelia | God is my strength | Hebrew, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gaytana | From Gaeta (a town in Italy) | Italian, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Geanah | God is gracious | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gedeon | Hewer | Greek, Hebrew, Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gelawdewos | Lame; limping | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Gemalli | Likely 'gem' or 'little gem' (derived from 'gemma') | Latin | Girl | — | |
| Gemel | Twin | Latin | Boy | — | |
| Geminia | Twin; born as a twin | Latin | Girl | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Latin-origin name in our dataset.