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$Unique_ID{PAR00343}
$Font{NP}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Names for Boys: B}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{
Editors of Consumer Guide
Harder, Kelsey}
$Subject{Names Boys B}
$Log{}
The Ultimate Baby Name Book
Names for Boys: B
Baile (see Bailey)
Bailey Old English beg-leah, "wood or clearing where berries
grow"; also, English bailiff. The derivation of this
place name is different from that of bailiff, which comes
from Latin baiulus, "porter." But in Middle English, baile
meant "outside the castle wall," so it's impossible to
figure out the exact derivation of the name. Most Scotsmen
who are named Bailey claim the place-name derivation, while
Englishmen seem to prefer the occupational name. The name
is unusual in the United States, but it is found
occasionally in the deep South, especially among people
with Scottish ancestry. Geoffrey Chaucer gives the name
Baillie to the innkeeper in The Canterbury Tales.
Variations: Baile, Baillie (English and Scottish), Baily, Bayley
Bailintin (see Valentine)
Baillie, Baily (see Bailey)
Balto (see Walter)
Bana-Barna (see Barnaby)
Bard (see Barden)
Barden Old English "barley valley." This name is usually a
surname, that is sometimes given to a son as a way of
keeping a family name in use. It was originally an
interlanguage compound formed from Old English barrig,
"barley," and Scottish denne, "small valley."
Nickname: Bard
Variation: Bardon
Bardon (see Barden)
Barn (see Barnaby, Barnard)
Barnaba (see Barnaby)
Barnabe (see Barnaby)
Barnaby Hebrew from Aramaic Barnabas, "son of encouragement." The
prefix "bar-" means "son of" in Aramaic. Barnabas was a
companion and aid to St. Paul in his missionary work. The
name has been used in England since the Middle Ages and
ranks in the 100 most-often-used names in the United
States. Charles Dickens used the name for the title
character of Barnaby Rudge, and Barnaby Jones is the name
of a long-running television series.
Nicknames: Barn, Barney, Barnie, Nab
Variations: Bana-Barna (Hungarian), Barnaba (Italian and Polish),
Barnabe (French, Portuguese, and Spanish), Bermobe, Bernabe
(Spanish), Bernaver, Bernavil, Vernavela
Barnard Old German Berinhard, "brave bear," from berin [a bear] +
hard [firm]. This name came to England at the time of the
Norman Conquest and has been a popular name since the
twelfth century. In the United States, it ranks in the 100
most-often-used boys' names. There have been several
saints with this name. St. Bernard of Montjoux, the patron
saint of mountaineers, did missionary work in the Alps,
where two passes are named for him, as well as a breed of
life-saving dogs. St. Bernard of Clairvaux reformed the
Cistercian monasteries and was noted for his great wisdom
and his skill as a mediator.
Famous names: Bernard M. Baruch (advisor to presidents)
Bernard Malamud (novelist)
George Bernard Shaw (dramatist)
Other spelling: Bernard
Nicknames: Barn, Barney, Barnie, Beno, Benny, Bernie, Berny, Dino,
Nado, Nayo
Variations: Bernal, Bernaldino, Bernardedo, Bernardin (French),
Bernardino (Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese), Bernardo,
Bernat (Hungarian), Bernavil, Bernek, Berno (Czech), Bjorn
(Swedish), Vernaldo, Vernaldos (Greek), Vernardino
(Spanish)
Barney Form of Barnaby or Barnard. This nickname has become a
separate name, which may trace its current popularity to
the television comedy series Barney Miller.
Other spelling: Barnie
Barnie (see Barnaby, Barnard)
Baron (see Barron)
Barret (see Barry)
Barrie (see Barry)
Barris (see Barry)
Barron Old German "a free man." Spelled baron, this name
became a royal title.
Famous name: James Barron Adler (publisher)
Variation: Baron
Barry Irish bearrach, "spear"; also, a form of Benedict. This
name was exclusively Irish until the twentieth century when
it became popular in both England and the United States.
The large number of Irish immigrants to the two countries
probably influenced the spread of the name.
Famous name: Barry Goldwater (politician)
Variations: Barret, Barrie, Barris (Irish and English)
Bart Form of Bartholomew or Barton. This name has become a
separate given name, and now ranks in the 100 most-popular
boys' names.
Famous name: Bart Starr (football player)
Barta (see Bartholomew)
Bartalo (see Bartholomew)
Bartek (see Bartholomew)
Barth (see Bartholomew)
Bartholo (see Bartholomew)
Bartholomaios (see Bartholomew)
Bartholomaus (see Bartholomew)
Bartholomew Hebrew "son of Talmai" from Aramaic telem, "furrow." This
name contains the prefix "bar-" that means "son of."
Little is known of St. Bartholomew, the only reference to
him is in the Gospel of Mark, where he is listed as one of
the Apostles. He is supposed to have preached in India and
in Armenia, where he is said to have been skinned alive and
then crucified head down. The Gospel of Bartholomew was
deemed apocryphal and was condemned. The name became
popular in England after the twelfth century, with almost
200 churches dedicated to the saint. The name ranks in the
100 most-popular boys' names, but its appearance in the
United States is declining. Ben Jonson's play, Bartholomew
Fair, pictures the famous August fair at Smithfield.
Nicknames: Bart, Barth, Bartie, Bartle, Barton, Barty, Bat, Mew, Tola,
Toli
Variations: Barta (Hungarian), Bartalo, Bartek (Czech), Bartholo,
Bartholomaios (Greek), Bartholomaus, Bartholomieu (French),
Bartolame (Spanish), Bartold (German), Bartollo, Bartolo
(Italian and Spanish), Bartolomej, Bartolomeu (Portuguese),
Bartolomiy (Russian), Vartolomei (Bulgarian), Vartolomeiu
(Rumanian)
Bartholomieu (see Bartholomew)
Bartie (see Bartholomew)
Bartle (see Bartholomew)
Bartolame (see Bartholomew)
Bartold (see Bartholomew)
Bartollo, Bartolo (see Bartholomew)
Bartolomej (see Bartholomew)
Bartolomeu (see Bartholomew)
Bartolomiy (see Bartholomew)
Barton Old English Beretun from bere [barley or corn] + run
[farm]; or Old English Burhtun, "fortified town," from burh
[burg] + tun [town]; other meanings from Old English
include "broad town," "Budeca's town," and "town on the
Bredy River"; also, a variation of Burton or Bartholomew.
Since place names ordinarily become surnames, Barton is
better known as one, with several famous--and
infamous--people carrying the name, including Clara Barton,
who organized the American Red Cross and worked to reform
women's prisons. Elizabeth Barton was known as "the Maid
of Kent." She prophesied against the marriage of Henry
VIII and Anne Boleyn. After the marriage she claimed that
Henry was no longer a king favored by God. For this
"treasonable act," she was executed at Tyburn. The name is
among the 100 most-common boys' names in the United States
and is increasing in popularity.
Famous name: Barton MacLane (actor)
Nickname: Bart
Bartram (see Bertram)
Barty (see Bartholomew)
Bas (see Basil)
Baselius (see Basil)
Basil Greek basilon, "royal." Several saints had this name,
including St. Basil the Great, founder of the Eastern
Orthodox Church. His father was St. Basil; his mother,
St. Emmelia.
Famous names: Vassily Cateforis (mathematician)
Basil Rathbone (actor)
Nicknames: Bas, Vas
Variations: Baselius, Basilio (Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian),
Basilus, Basle (Swedish), Bazek (Polish), Bazyli, Vasilios
(Greek), Vasiliy, Vassilyij, Vasska (Russian), Vasyltso,
Vazul (Hungarian)
Basilio (see Basil)
Basilus (see Basil)
Basle (see Basil)
Baste (see Sebastian)
Bastien (see Sebastian)
Basto (see Sebastian)
Bat (see Bartholomew)
Bayley (see Bailey)
Bazek (see Basil)
Bazyli (see Basil)
Bechtel (see Albert, Bertram)
Bedo (see Frederick)
Beltran (see Bertram)
Beltrao (see Bertram)
Ben Usually a form of Benedict, Benjamin, Bennett, Bentley, or
Bernard; also, from Scots beann, "peak," or Hebrew ben,
"son of." It sometimes appears as a separate name.
Famous names: Ben Jonson (dramatist)
Ben Shahn (painter)
Bendek, Bendik (see Benedict)
Benedetto (see Benedict)
Benedicktas (see Benedict)
Benedict Latin benedictus, "blessed." Several saints and fifteen
popes have been named Benedict. The name connotes holiness
and austerity. Benedict of Nursia, the father of Western
monasticism and founder of the Benedictine Order, made such
strict rules and insisted on such a high level of
asceticism while he was an abbott that his monks tried to
poison him. The name does not occur in England before the
Norman Conquest. Benedict used to be a humorous name for a
newly married man, who formerly had been a confirmed
bachelor.
Famous name: Benedict Arnold (American Revolutionary traitor)
Nicknames: Barry, Ben, Beni, Benito, Benny, Betto, Dick, Dicta, Dix,
Dixie
Variations: Bendek (Polish), Bendik (Norwegian), Benedetto (Italian),
Benedicktas (Latvian), Benedictae, Benedicto (Spanish),
Benedictum, Benedikt (Bulgarian, Czech, and German),
Benedo (Russian), Bengt (Swedish), Benneo (Spanish),
Benoit (French), Bentin, Pentti (Finnish), Venedictos
(Greek)
Benedictae (see Benedict)
Benedicto (see Benedict)
Benedictum (see Benedict)
Benedikt (see Benedict)
Benedo (see Benedict)
Benejaminas (see Benjamin)
Benek (see Benjamin)
Bengt (see Benedict)
Beni (see Benedict)
Beniamin (see Benjamin)
Beniamino (see Benjamin)
Benito (see Benedict)
Benja (see Benjamin)
Benjame (see Benjamin)
Benjamin Hebrew "son of the south" or "son of the right hand."
This name can be found in three places in the Bible. In
Genesis, Benjamin is the youngest son of Jacob and was
originally named Benoni, "son of my sorrow," because of the
pain he caused his mother as she was dying giving birth to
him. Jacob renamed him. In Chronicles, the sons of
Benjamin are listed, and a grandson Benjamin is noted. A
Benjamin also appears as the son of Hiram in Ezra. The
name became common in England during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, and remained popular until the late
nineteenth century when the use of biblical names began to
decline. Recently, the name has made a strong recovery, as
have all biblical names, and it ranks high among the 100
most-often used names.
Famous name: Benjamin Franklin (statesman and inventor)
Nicknames: Ben, Benja, Benjy, Bennie, Benny, Mincho
Variations: Benejaminas (Latvian), Benek (Polish), Beniamin, Beniamino
(Italian), Benjame (Spanish), Benjaminin, Binjamin
(Yiddish), Veniamin, Venjamin, Venya (Russian)
Benjaminin (see Benjamin)
Benjy (see Benjamin, Benny)
Benneo (see Benedict)
Bennett Variation of Benedict. This name appears most often as
a surname, as it does in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice,
which describes the attempt to marry off the five daughters
of the Bennet family.
Bennie (see Benjamin)
Benny Form of Barnard, Benedict, or Benjamin. The name has
been used in literature for retarded characters, such as
Benjy in William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, Benny
in John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, and Benny on the
television series L.A. Law.
Variation: Benjy
Beno (see Barnard)
Benoit (see Benedict)
Bent (see Bentley)
Bentin (see Benedict)
Bentley Old English beonet-leah, "bent-grass meadow." This
name is most common in the southern part of the United
States, where mothers sometimes give their maiden names to
their sons to preserve a family name.
Other spelling: Bently
Nicknames: Ben, Bent, Lee
Bently (see Bentley)
Bermobe (see Barnaby)
Bernabe (see Barnaby)
Bernal (see Barnard)
Bernaldino (see Barnard)
Bernard Variation of Barnard.
Famous names: Bernard Allen Duffy (baseball pitcher)
Bernard Fay (historian)
Bernard Malamud (writer)
Bernard Baruch (economist)
Bernardedo (see Barnard)
Bernardin (see Barnard)
Bernardino (see Barnard)
Bernardo (see Barnard)
Bernat (see Barnard, Everett)
Bernaver (see Barnaby)
Bernavil (see Barnaby, Barnard)
Bernek (see Barnard)
Bernie (see Barnard)
Berno (see Barnard)
Berny (see Barnard)
Bert Form of Albert, Bertram, Burton, Delbert, Egbert, Herbert,
Hubert, Norbert, or Robert; also, Old German berhta,
"bright."
Famous name: Bert Lahr (actor)
Bertie (see Albert, Bertram, Egbert, Herbert, Norbert)
Bertok (see Bertram)
Berton (see Burton)
Bertram Old German Berahtraben from berhta [bright] + hraben
[raven]. This name came into England at the time of the
Norman Conquest. It was popular in the nineteenth century,
but it's unusual today. Shakespeare used the name for the
Count of Rousillon in All's Well That Ends Well, and Sir
Walter Scott used it in Castle Dangerous.
Famous name: Bertrand Russell (philosopher)
Nicknames: Bert, Bertie
Variations: Bartram (English), Bechtel (German), Beltran (Spanish),
Beltrao (Portuguese), Bertok (Hungarian), Bertrand
(French), Bertrando (Italian)
Bertrand (see Bertram)
Bertrando (see Bertram)
Berty (see Burton)
Beto (see Albert, Robert)
Betto (see Benedict)
Bevan (see Evan)
Bhaltair (see Walter)
Bictar (see Victor)
Bili (see Billy)
Bill Form of William.
Famous names: Bill Blass (fashion designer)
Bill Cosby (actor)
Bill Moyers (journalist)
Billie (see William)
Billy Form of William. Sometimes this name is chosen by
entertainers or used by men in occupations in which a
nickname seems more appropriate than a formal name. As a
separate given name, it ranks seventieth in the 100
most-popular boys' names.
Famous names: William Franklin "Billy" Graham (evangelist)
Alfred Manuel "Billy" Martin (baseball manager)
Variations: Bili (Rumanian), Blaz (Serbian), Boleslaw (Russian),
Vila (Czech), Vili (Hungarian)
Binjamin (see Benjamin)
Binkentios (see Vincent)
Biron (see Byron)
Bisenti (see Vincent)
Bjarne (see Bjorn)
Bjorn Scandinavian form of Barnard.
Famous name: Bjorn Borg (tennis player)
Other spelling: Bjorne
Variation: Bjarne
Bjorne (see Bjorn)
Blaan (see Blaine)
Blain (see Blaine)
Blaine Celtic "thin"; also, Old English "flame." This surname has
begun to appear as a given name, especially in the United
States where Irish names for children are in vogue. The
only saint of the name was St. Blane of Scotland, who is
also known as St. Blaan.
Famous name: Blaine Peterson (hockey player)
Other spellings: Blane, Blain
Variation: Blaan
Blair Celtic "place"; also, Old German "battlefield." This
surname has become a popular boys' name, ranking high in
the 100 most-often-used names in the United States.
Although it can be a girl's name, Blair is still considered
masculine. But if the name starts being used extensively
for girls, parents are likely to stop using it for boys.
Famous name: Blair Stewart (hockey player)
Blake Old English blac, "pale," "loss of color," or "shining
white"; also, "black" or "dark." Until the twentieth
century, this was almost always a surname. As a given
name, it is gaining popularity, probably because of the
current vogue for short names, including Blake, Brad, Pat,
and Grant.
Famous name: Blake Edwards (movie director)
Blane (see Blaine)
Blaz (see Billy)
Bob Form of Robert. Most people think of Bob as a nickname.
Famous names: Bob Dylan (singer)
Bob Hope (comedian)
Boba (see Boris)
Bobbie (see Robert)
Bobby Form of Bob. This nickname is usually combined with
another name, such as Bobby Joe and Bobby Lee. These names
were once common in the southern part of the United States,
but their popularity is fading fast. Bobby is also a
popular nickname for politicians, entertainers, and
athletes.
Famous name: Robert Francis "Bobby" Kennedy (U.S. senator)
Bobik (see Boris)
Bodgan (see Donald)
Bodog (see Felix)
Bogomir (see Geoffrey)
Bohdanko (see Donald)
Boleslaw (see Billy)
Bomani Ngoni (Malawi) "warrior." This name has become
popular with Black-Americans who want to give their
children an African name.
Borenka (see Boris)
Boris Slavic borotj, "to fight." The eleventh-century St. Boris
was murdered by his brother after Boris refused to raise
his sword against him. Following his burial in St. Basil's
church, miracles were said to occur at his grave. He is
the patron saint of Moscow.
Famous names: Boris Godunov (tsar of Russia)
Boris Karloff (actor)
Nicknames: Boba, Bobik, Borenka, Borisik, Borka
Variations: Borislav (Slovakian), Borisov (Bulgarian), Borissof
(French), Borys (Polish), Borysko (Ukrainian)
Borisik (see Boris)
Borislav (see Boris)
Borisov, Borissof (see Boris)
Borka (see Boris)
Borys (see Boris)
Borysko (see Boris)
Bowen (see Evan)
Brad Old English brad "broad"; also, shortened form of Bradley
or Bradford. Brad probably started as a nickname for a
body characteristic--a common background for a name--but
lately it has become a popular independent name. Brad
ranks eightieth among the most-popular given names for
boys.
Bradford Old English "broad ford." This place name developed
first into a surname, but now it's often used as a first
name.
Nickname: Brad
Bradlee (see Bradley)
Bradley Old English "broad meadow." This place name that
became a surname now appears as a first name. The
immediate influence for the name is Omar Bradley, a World
War II general.
Famous name: Bradley Smith (author)
Other spellings: Bradlee, Bradlie
Nicknames: Brad, Lee
Bradlie (see Bradley)
Brage Possibly a form of Bragi, the Norse god of poetry.
Famous name: Brage Golding (university president)
Bram (see Abraham)
Brareus (see Brian)
Brent Irish bran, "a raven"; or "burnt," as in a burned place or
field. Several names of Irish origin, Brand, Brendan,
Bran, and Brenda connote "flame" or "burn." All have
become popular in the United States in recent years because
of the attraction of Irish names and the current popularity
of short, hard-sounding names.
Famous name: Brent Musberger (sports announcer)
Brett Celtic Breton from Old French Briton, "a person from
Brittany." Brett has become popular in the United States
and now ranks seventieth among the most-often-used names.
The popularity of baseball player George Howard Brett may
contribute to its success.
Famous name: Bret Harte (author)
Brian Greek briaros, "strong"; also, from Irish bre, "hill."
This name is popular in Ireland because of the legendary
Irish hero, King Brian Borohma. The name Briaros, however,
is from Greek mythology. He was one of the Centimanes and
had a hundred arms and fifty heads. The figure symbolized
strength. Names developed from Briaros were popular during
the Middle Ages. Brian was introduced to England with the
Norman Conquest. After dropping from use as a given name
during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it has made
a strong return and now ranks among the top-ten names in
the United States.
Famous names: Brian Donlevy (actor)
Bryant Gumbel (TV personality)
Variations: Brareus (Greek), Briano (Italian), Bryant
Briano (see Brian)
Broderick (see Roderick)
Bron (see Brown)
Bronislava (see Bruno)
Bronislaw (see Bruno)
Bronson (see Brown, Bruno)
Brooks English "son of Brook."
Famous names: Brooks Atkinson (drama critic)
Brooks Reed (lawyer)
Brown Old English brun or bron, "brown." This color name used
to be a nickname for a "brown person." The name is
sometimes confused with brun or bruyn, "bear," but the Old
English beras developed into the modern word bear, while
brun became brown. The surname is very common in England
and the United States, but as a given name, it's unusual.
Brown Bess was the nickname of an English musket in the
eighteenth century.
Famous name: Brown Denton (baseball player)
Nickname: Brownie
Variations: Browning, Bron, Bronson (English)
Other spelling: Browne
Browne, Brownie (see Brown)
Browning (see Brown)
Bru (see Bruno)
Bruce French Bruys, "from the brush thicket." This French
common noun became a place name when a castle was built
next to the bushy area and took the name Bruys. The Bruces
of Scotland were originally Normans and came from Bruys,
France, during the Norman Conquest. The name declined in
use until the latter part of the twentieth century when it
achieved a high rank in the 100 most-often-used names in
the 1970s and 1980s in the United States.
Famous names: Bruce Jenner (track athlete)
Bruce Morton (TV announcer)
Bruce Springsteen (singer)
Nickname: Brucie
Variations: Bruis (French), Brus, Bruys (Scottish)
Brucie (see Bruce)
Bruin (see Bruno)
Bruis (see Bruce)
Bruni, Bruny (see Bruno)
Bruno Old German brun, "brown," usually associated with bears.
This name is not as popular in the United States as it is
in Germany where it is associated with the eleventh-century
St. Bruno of Cologne. After a brilliant career as a
professor of theology and philosophy, he founded the
Carthusian Order at Grenoble. He was made a saint in 1623,
and his day is October 6.
Nicknames: Bru, Bruni, Bruny
Variations: Bronislava (Serbian), Bronislaw (Polish), Bronson, Bruin
Brus (see Bruce)
Bruys (see Bruce)
Bryant (see Brian)
Buadhach (see Victor)
Burl (see Burleigh)
Burleigh Old English burgeleah from burg + leah [meadow].
William Cecil, baron of Burleigh, was the chief minister
to Elizabeth I of England.
Famous name: Burleigh Arland "Stubblebeard" Grimes (baseball player)
Nickname: Burl
Variation: Burley
Burley (see Burleigh)
Burt (see Burton)
Burton Old English burhton, "from the fortress," from burh
[fortified place] + tun [town]. In earlier times, people
often took the name of the place where they lived. These
names usually start out as surnames but later spin off
given names.
Other spelling: Berton
Nicknames: Bert, Berty, Burt
Variation: Barton
Byron Old English byre, "hut"; also, Middle English bere, "bear."
This homely name literally means "the person who lives in
the hut." But it is also the name of one of the great
English poets George Noel Gordon, Lord Byron, the author of
Don Juan and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage.
Famous name: Byron Raymond White (football player, now U.S. Supreme
Court justice)
Variation: Biron