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Scottish Gaelic names - Baby names with the origin Scottish Gaelic

Showing 50 of 554 names
Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Malcolme Devotee or follower of Saint Columba ('Columba' = dove) Scottish Gaelic Boy
Malcome Devotee or servant of Saint Columba Scottish Gaelic Boy
Malcon Devotee/follower of Saint Columba Scottish Gaelic Boy
Malvine Likely 'smooth brow' or 'gentle/fair brow' (from Gaelic mala-mhìn); occasionally associated with Latin 'malva' (mallow) in some adaptations Scottish Gaelic Girl
Malvína Smooth or gentle brow (literally 'smooth forehead') Scottish Gaelic Girl
Malvínia Often interpreted as 'smooth' or 'gentle brow' (from Gaelic elements meaning 'smooth' + 'brow'). Scottish Gaelic Girl
Maolcolm Devotee or follower of St. Columba ('dove') Scottish Gaelic Boy
Maolcolmb Servant or devotee of (Saint) Columba - 'follower of Columba' Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Martainn Derived from Latin Martinus, meaning "of Mars" or "warlike" Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mcbride Son of the devotee/servant of Brigid (Saint Brigid) Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mccaulaeah Derived from Gaelic Mac Amhlaoibh meaning 'son/descendant of Amhlaoibh (Olaf)'; used as a feminine given name, interpreted as 'descendant of Olaf' Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mccaulei Son of Amhlaoibh/Amlaíb - descendant of Olaf Irish, Scottish Gaelic Unisex
Mccauleigh Son of Amhlaoibh (Amlaibh) - descendant of Olaf (literally 'ancestor's descendant') Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mccaulie Son of Amhlaoibh (the Gaelic form of Olaf) - essentially 'son of Olaf' Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
McCoy Son of Aodh (Aodh = 'fire'); often rendered 'son of Hugh'. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
McKay From Gaelic 'Mac Aoidh' meaning 'son of Aodh' (Aodh = 'fire', often anglicized as Hugh). Scottish Gaelic Boy
McKensie Originally 'son of Coinneach' - 'son of the fair/handsome one' (associated with Kenneth) Scottish Gaelic Unisex
McKenzie Son of Coinneach ('the fair' or 'handsome') - essentially 'son of Kenneth' Scottish Gaelic Unisex
Mckenzya Derived from the Gaelic surname meaning 'son of Coinneach' (descendant of Kenneth; 'handsome') Scottish Gaelic Unisex
mclean Son of the servant/follower of (St.) John Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mcnair Son of the heir Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mctavish Son of Thomas Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mctavysh Son of Tavish (Thomas); ultimately from Thomas meaning 'twin' Scottish Gaelic Boy
Mealcoluim Devotee/servant of Columba (Saint Columba, 'dove') Scottish Gaelic Boy
Meilseoir Likely 'confectioner' or 'sweet-maker' / 'sweet one' (derived from Gaelic root for 'sweet') Irish, Scottish Gaelic Unisex
mhaira Gaelic form of Mary; ultimately from Hebrew Miriam - meaning uncertain (commonly rendered as 'beloved', 'bitter', or 'wished-for child') Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mhaire Gaelic form of Mary, from Hebrew Miryam - commonly interpreted as 'bitter' or 'beloved'. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mhairee Gaelic form of Mary - associated meanings include 'bitter'/'sea of bitterness' or 'beloved' (from Miriam). Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mhairie Gaelic form of Mary - ultimately from Hebrew Miriam (commonly interpreted as “beloved,” “wished-for child,” or historically “sea of bitterness”). Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mhairy Gaelic form of Mary; traditionally associated with meanings such as 'sea of bitterness', 'bitter', or 'beloved'. Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mhàiri Derived from Miriam; commonly interpreted as 'sea of bitterness' or 'beloved/wished-for child'. Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mickenna Derived from Gaelic meaning 'descendant of Cionaodh (Aodh)'; often interpreted as 'born of fire'. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mor Hebrew: 'myrrh' (fragrant resin); Irish: 'great'; Welsh: 'sea' (Môr) Hebrew, Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh Unisex
Moragg Great (from Gaelic 'mòr' meaning 'big, great') Scottish Gaelic Girl
Morna Likely from Gaelic 'mór' ('great' or 'large') or an anglicized form of the personal name Mórán; broadly interpreted as 'great' or 'large'. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Morvyn Likely Celtic in origin - possibly 'sea maiden' from Welsh morwyn, or a variant of Mervyn/Merfyn with senses like 'eminent' or ties to 'sea/sea hill'. English, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh Unisex
Muira Uncertain - likely 'of the sea' (from Gaelic 'muir') or a feminine form/variant of Máire/Moira (Mary); other indigenous roots possible. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Muireagan Diminutive of Muire (Mary) - "little Mary" Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Muray Likely derived from Gaelic elements associated with the sea - often interpreted as 'sea settlement' or 'descendant of Muireach.' Scottish Gaelic Boy
Murriel Sea-bright (sea + bright/fair) Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Muyr Likely derived from Gaelic elements meaning 'sea' (muir) or related to Muireadhach 'lord/master'. Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Màireadh Pearl (equivalent of Margaret) Scottish Gaelic Girl
Màireag Diminutive/pet form of Màire - 'little Mary'; used as a Gaelic form related to Margaret (meaning 'pearl'). Scottish Gaelic Girl
Mòrach From Gaelic mòr (‘great, large’); a diminutive/affectionate form derived from that root Scottish Gaelic Girl
Nairig Probably a diminutive form of a Gaelic personal name; specific original meaning is uncertain or not well documented. Scottish Gaelic Boy
Nairna Likely "from Nairn" - referencing the River or town of Nairn in Scotland Scottish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Nathair Snake, serpent Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Neall Derived from Niall, commonly interpreted as "champion" (also sometimes given as "passionate" or possibly "cloud"; exact origin uncertain) Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Neilie From Niall/Neil - generally interpreted as 'champion' or associated with 'passionate'/'cloud'; used as a feminine/diminutive form Irish, Scottish Gaelic Girl
Neille Generally interpreted as 'champion' or 'passionate' (traditional associations also include 'cloud') Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy

Scottish Gaelic name popularity over time

Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Scottish Gaelic-origin name in our dataset.

554
Names in this origin
104
With data in 2024
31,600
Births 2024
76,536
Peak year 2000