Discover and Shortlist Your Perfect Baby Names!

Scottish names - Baby names with the origin Scottish

Showing 50 of 1,038 names
Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Catha Either 'pure' (from Catherine) or 'battle' (from Gaelic 'cath') English, Irish, Scottish Girl
Catrinn Pure Scottish Girl
Catrion Pure Irish (Gaelic), Scottish Girl
Chalmer Chamberlain; keeper of the chamber or household officer English, Scottish Boy
Chalmr Chamberlain; steward (keeper of the chamber) English, Scottish Boy
Chryston 'Christ's town' - settlement associated with Christians; also used as a variant of Christian ('follower of Christ') English, Scottish Boy
Cirstey Follower of Christ (Christian) English, Scottish Girl
Cirsty Diminutive of Christine - 'follower of Christ' English, Scottish Girl
Clowie Diminutive meaning "little Clow"; if ultimately linked to Clovis, can carry the sense "famous in battle." Scottish Unisex
Clunie From Gaelic 'cluain', meaning 'meadow' or 'pasture' (place name). Scottish Unisex
Clunies From the Gaelic 'cluain' meaning 'meadow' or 'pasture' (originally a place/surname) Scottish Unisex
Clure From a Scottish surname meaning 'son/servant of the pale one' (derived from Gaelic elements) Scottish Unisex
Clydie From the River Clyde Scottish Girl
Clyne Meadow, pasture; 'from the meadow' Irish, Scottish Unisex
Coan Likely 'descendant of Cuanán' (from Irish Cuan meaning roughly 'harbor' or 'beloved/little one'), or a locational name meaning 'dweller by a hollow/cove' in Cornish/English contexts. Cornish, English, Irish, Scottish Boy
Cobern Surname-derived name meaning 'dweller by the (dark/coal) stream' or 'stream frequented by wild birds.' English, Scottish Boy
Coberne Probably surname-derived meaning 'dweller by the (dark) stream' or 'brook' (exact meaning uncertain) English, Scottish Boy
Cobourne From/near the stream; dweller by the brook English, Scottish Boy
Cobyrn Dweller by the stream / brook (sometimes rendered as 'dark/coal stream' from related surname forms) English, Scottish Boy
Colli Variant/diminutive of Colin - "young pup" or "little one"; as an Italian surname, from colle/colli meaning "hills". English, Irish, Italian, Scottish Boy
Collice Surname-derived given name - likely denotes a family name; possibly linked to 'hill' (Old English collis) or a form related to Colin/Collin (diminutive of Nicholas) English, Scottish Boy
Colvill From Colleville: 'Col(a)/Col's town' or 'settlement of Cola' (derived from a Norman personal name) Norman French, Scottish Boy
Comyn Originally a territorial/family name meaning 'from Comines' (denoting origin or belonging to the Comyn/Cumming family). Norman, Scottish Boy
Corbie Crow, raven French, Scottish Boy
Craigg Rock, crag Scottish Boy
Craighton Town by a crag or rock; settlement near a rock English, Scottish Boy
Craw Related to 'crow' (also associated with Crawford: 'ford of the crows') English, Scottish Boy
Crayge Rock Scottish Boy
Creage Rock, crag Scottish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Creig Rock, crag Scottish Boy
Creighm Rock, crag Irish, Scottish Boy
Creight From Crichton - a place-name associated with a rock or boundary; roughly ‘rock/settlement’ English, Scottish Boy
Creightow Town by the crag; settlement near a rock English, Scottish Boy
Crichtyn Modern given name probably based on the Scottish place-name/surname Crichton - broadly associated with a settlement near a crossing or creek; also used as a creative form of Kristin/Christen. English, Scottish Unisex
Crieghton From the place-name Crichton - likely 'boundary town' or 'town by a crag/rock'. English, Scottish Boy
Crighton From the lands of Crichton - likely 'town by the crag' or 'boundary town' (place name) Scottish Boy
Croslie From the clearing by a cross; dweller by a cross or crossroad English, Scottish Unisex
Culbert Possibly 'bright' or 'famous' (from Germanic element 'berht') English, Germanic, Scottish Boy
Cullie Diminutive/pet form of Cullen/Collie - variously associated with 'little hound' or 'of the holly' depending on origin English, Irish, Scottish Unisex
Cullo Likely derived from Gaelic 'cul' meaning 'back, nook, recess' - roughly 'from the back/remote place' (as a surname); unrelated meanings exist in Italian. Gaelic, Scottish Boy
Cullodena Likely 'from Culloden' or 'of Culloden' - a modern invented feminine name derived from a Scottish place-name English, Scottish Girl
Cullodina Likely 'of Culloden' - a feminine form inspired by the Scottish place name Culloden; precise Gaelic elements and exact meaning are uncertain Scottish Girl
Cumming 'From Comines' - denoting origin from the town of Comines / descendant of the Comyn family Scottish Boy
Cunningham Homestead of the king's people; a Scottish habitational surname Scottish Boy
Currey Originally a surname - either 'from Currie' (a place-name meaning 'hollow' or 'cauldron') or an anglicized Irish family name 'Ó Comhraidhe' ('descendant of Comhraidhe'). English, Irish, Scottish Unisex
Currie Originally a surname meaning a dweller by a hollow or marsh - from Gaelic roots such as coire ('hollow') or currach ('marsh'). English, Irish, Scottish Unisex
Dalaz Likely 'from the meadow/valley' by analogy with 'Dallas'; may also be an invented name without established meaning. English, Scottish Unisex
Dall Blind (Gaelic) or valley (English surname) Irish, Scottish Boy
Dallaz Meadow-dweller; from 'valley' or 'meadow' English, Scottish Unisex
Dalroi Likely 'valley king' or 'king of the assembly' (interpreted from 'Dal' + 'roi'). Scottish Boy
1 2 3 9 10 11 19 20 21

Scottish name popularity over time

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

1,038
Names in this origin
5
With data in 2025
0
Births 2025
90,999
Peak year 2014