| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graheme | Gravelly homestead | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Grahim | From Grantham; 'gravelly homestead' (place-based surname meaning) | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Grahme | From the place name Grantham - 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray home' | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Grahym | Originally a place-name meaning 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray homestead'. | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Graiam | From the place Grantham - generally rendered as a homestead/place name (often given as 'Granta's homestead' or 'gravelly homestead') | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Graihame | From the gravelly homestead | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gran | A short form meaning 'grand' or 'great' or a diminutive/short form of other names (e.g., Gráinne) | English, Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Grayham | From Grantham; 'gravelly homestead' or 'gray/gravelly home' | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Greigg | Watchful, vigilant | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Greigoor | Watchful, vigilant | Irish (Gaelic), Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gretna | From the town of Gretna; likely 'gravelly place' or 'town on gravel' | English, Scottish | Girl | — | |
| Greyham | From the place-name Grantham, meaning 'gravelly homestead'. | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Gryer | Watchful, vigilant (linked to Gregor/Gregory) | English, Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Gunn | Battle, war | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Guthree | From the place called Guthrie (place-name origin; often associated with a settlement or windy/streamy locality) | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Guthrey | From the place-name Guthrie, likely meaning 'windy' or 'wind-swept place'. | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hamelton | From a settlement associated with a person called Hamil/Hamel - commonly interpreted as "Hamel's town" or "Hamil's settlement." | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hamiltan | Settlement or town by a flat-topped or crooked hill | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hamylton | From the habitational surname Hamilton - 'Hamil's town' or 'home/settlement of Hamil' | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Harailt | Uncertain; if related to Old Norse Haraldr, likely carries the sense 'army ruler' or 'leader'. | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hardie | Hardy; brave, strong | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Heilan | Highlander; of the Highlands | Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Hendron | Derived from Henry - 'home ruler'; likely a surname meaning 'son/descendant of Henry'. | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hew | From the element 'hug' meaning 'heart, mind, spirit' (i.e., 'mind, thought, spirit') | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Houstin | Settlement of Hugh (Hugh's town) | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Hume | From the homestead | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Huntly | From the hunting meadow / hunter's clearing | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Ien | Varies by origin: when derived from Ian/John - 'God is gracious'; when used as a Dutch diminutive it carries the meaning of its root name rather than a separate meaning. | Dutch, English, Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Imlah | Rare and of uncertain meaning; likely a surname-turned given name (Scottish 'Imlach') with no widely attested given-name meaning. | Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Inglis | English; of English origin | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Inglys | Derived from Old English, meaning 'English' or 'of the English'. | English, Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Innys | Island (primary); alternatively a respelling of Inès/Agnes meaning 'pure' in some usages | Irish (Gaelic), Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Irven | From the River Irvine ('green water'); sometimes linked to Old English meaning 'boar friend'. | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Irving. Irvin | Either 'from the River Irvine' (place name) or derived from Old English Eoforwine meaning 'boar friend'. | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Irvyn | From the Scottish River Irvine meaning 'green water' or from Old English elements meaning 'boar friend' - broadly 'river friend' or 'boar-friend'. | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Irvyne | Likely 'green water' or 'from the green river' (derived from the River Irvine place-name) | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Irvyng | From the river Irvine; 'green river' or 'green water' | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Iye | Varies by origin: in Yoruba (Ìyẹ) it can mean "feather"; in Scottish usage it is a historical personal name without a clear modern meaning. | Scottish, Yoruba | Unisex | — | |
| Jamesina | Feminine form of James; 'supplanter' (derived from Jacob) | English, Scottish | Girl | — | |
| Jameysina | Feminine form of James - 'supplanter' | English, Scottish | Girl | — | |
| Jammiie | Supplanter (derived from the name James) | Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Jardine | From the garden; gardener or little garden | Scottish | Unisex | — | |
| Kaldwell | Cold spring / cold stream (dweller by a cold well or spring) | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Kalhoon | Derived from a Scottish place-name/surname (Colquhoun/Calhoun); likely denotes someone from a narrow corner or bend (a place-based name). | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Kalhoun | Toponymic surname from the place name Colquhoun - often interpreted as 'from the narrow wood' or 'of the woods'. | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Kambell | Derived from Gaelic 'cam beul', meaning 'crooked mouth'. | Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Kameri | Likely 'moon' (if derived from Arabic/Swahili qamar); alternatively a modern variant of Cameron (originally 'crooked nose'). | English, Scottish, Swahili | Unisex | — | |
| Kamerona | Derived from Cameron, traditionally interpreted as 'crooked nose' (surname origin). | Scottish | Girl | — | |
| Karr | Multiple possible senses: 'marsh/brushwood', 'curly-haired' or 'dark-haired' depending on origin | English, Scottish | Boy | — | |
| Karrick | Rock; from a rocky place | Irish (Gaelic), Scottish | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Scottish-origin name in our dataset.