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