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$Unique_ID{PAR00364}
$Font{NP}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Names for Boys: W}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{
Editors of Consumer Guide
Harder, Kelsey}
$Subject{Names Boys W}
$Log{}
The Ultimate Baby Name Book
Names for Boys: W
Wade Old English waden, "to wade."
Famous name: Wade Boggs (baseball player)
Walache (see Wallace)
Waldo (see Oswald)
Walker Old English wealcere, "a fuller." A walker cleans and
thickens cloth by gathering and pleating it. The
profession is now obsolete, but the given name is still
used occasionally.
Famous names: Walker Evans (photographer)
Walker Percy (writer)
Wallace Old English wealas, "stranger" or literally "Welsh."
William Wallace is a thirteenth-century national hero of
Scotland. Along with Robert Bruce, he is a central
character of a nineteenth-century romantic novel by Jane
Porter entitled The Scottish Chiefs.
Famous names: Wallace Berry (actor)
Wallace Stegner (author)
Other spelling: Wallis
Nicknames: Wallie, Wally
Variations: Vlach (Slavic), Walache (German), Wallache (German),
Walsh, Welch, Welsh
Wallache (see Wallace)
Wallie, Wally Form of Oswald, Wallace, or Walter. In the television
series Our Miss Brooks, actor Wally Cox played Mr. Peepers,
the science teacher.
Famous name: Wally Schirra (astronaut)
Wallis (see Wallace)
Walsh (see Wallace)
Walt Form of Walter.
Famous names: Walt Disney (cartoonist)
Walt Whitman (poet)
Walter Old German Waldhar, "democracy," from vald [rule] + harja
[people]. This name dates back to the Domesday Book in
England. By the sixteenth century, it had become well
known through the exploits of Sir Walter Raleigh, who
established one of the first English settlements in North
America. From 1850 to 1950, Walter was one of the
most-popular names for boys in the United States, but it
disappeared suddenly from popular-name lists, and now it
seems dated. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, James
Thurber's short story, which was made into a movie, is
about the frustrations of day-to-day life. The close
association of the name Walter with the simple little man
who is the hero of the story may explain why Walter is no
longer a popular name.
Famous names: Walter Cronkite (TV newscaster)
Walter Lippman (journalist)
Walter Payton (football player)
Walter Reed (pathologist)
Walter Reuther (labor organizer)
Nickname: Wallie, Wally, Walt, Wat
Variations: Balto, Bhaltair (Scottish), Gauthier (French), Gautier
(French), Gualterio (Spanish), Gualtiero (Italian),
Guittiere (Spanish), Ualtar (Irish), Walters, Walther
(German), Waterio, Watkin, Watson
Walters (see Walter)
Walther (see Walter)
Ward Old English weard, "guard"; also a form of Howard.
Famous name: Ward Bond (actor)
Variations: Warden, Warder
Warden (see Ward)
Warder (see Ward)
Wariner (see Warner)
Warner Old German Warinhari from Varin [a folk name of uncertain
origin] + harja [folk]. This name is more common as a
surname, but mystery fans remember actor Warner Oland and
the movies in which he played the famed Chinese sleuth
Charlie Chan.
Famous names: Warner Robins (WWI flier)
Werner von Braun (scientist)
Variations: Garner, Wariner, Werner (German)
Warren Old German Varin, a folk name; also, Middle English
warenne, "game park." This very old name dates to the
Domesday Book in England, although it has never been
extremely popular.
Famous names: Warren Burger (U.S. Supreme Court chief justice)
Warren G. Harding (29th U.S. president)
Warrick (see Varrick)
Wat (see Walter)
Waterio (see Walter)
Watkin (see Walter)
Watson (see Walter)
Wayland Old English "land of the pathway" from weg [road] + "land."
Famous name: Wayland Jennings (singer)
Variations: Waylen, Waylon, Wieland (German)
Waylen (see Wayland)
Waylon (see Wayland)
Wayne Old English waun, "meadow"; also, a form of Duane. While
this name is not unusual in the United States, it's never
achieved the popularity here that it has in England, where
it's one of the top-50 names for boys.
Famous names: Wayne Gretzky (hockey player)
Wayne Rogers (actor)
Webb Old English webbe, "a weaver." This is an occupational
name that is used occasionally as a first name.
Variation: Webbe, Webster
Webbe (see Webb)
Webster (see Webb)
Weed (see Reed)
Welch (see Wallace)
Welsh (see Wallace)
Wende (see Wendell)
Wendell Origin uncertain; possibly Old English "winding valley"
from wendan [to wind] + dell [valley].
Famous names: Oliver Wendell Holmes (U.S. Supreme Court chief justice)
Wendell Phillips (abolitionist)
Variation: Wende (German)
Werner (see Warner)
Wes (see Wesley, Weston)
Wesley Old English "west meadow." Parents honor John Wesley, the
founder of Methodism, when they give their babies this
surname as a first name.
Famous name: Wesley Mitchell (economist)
Nicknames: Lee, Leigh, Wes
Variations: Westleigh, Westley
Westleigh, Westley (see Wesley)
Weston Old English "west town." This very old surname can be
used as a first name.
Famous name: Weston Dickson Fisler (baseball player)
Nickname: Wes
Wieland (see Wayland)
Wilder Old English wealdhere from weald [strong] + here [army].
Wiley (see William)
Wilfred Old English "will or wish for peace" from wil [will] +
frith [peace]. This name is unusual in the United States,
but it's more popular in England. Wilfred is the name of
the hero of two of Sir Walter Scott's novels, Ivanhoe and
Rokeby.
Famous names: Wilfred Hyde-White (actor)
Wilfred Leach (stage and film director)
Variations: Wilfrid, Wilfried
Wilfrid, Wilfried (see Wilfred)
Wilhelm (see William)
Wilkes (see William)
Will Form of Willard or William. Referring to himself,
Shakespeare wrote: "Make but my name thy love, and love
that still/ And then thou lovest me, for my name is Will."
Famous name: Will Rogers (humorist)
Willard Old German "strong-willed."
Famous name: Willard Scott (TV personality)
Nicknames: Will, Willie, Willy
Willem (see William)
Willet (see William)
Willi, Willie, Form of Willard and William.
Willy
Famous names: Willi Smith (fashion designer)
Willie Mays (baseball player)
Willie Nelson (singer)
Willie Shoemaker (jockey)
William Old German Wilahelm, "firm protector," from vilja [will] +
helma [helmet]. William has long been a popular name. In
both England and the United States, only the name John is
chosen more often than William. The name came to England
with William the Conqueror, who led the Norman Invasion of
Great Britain. The German name Wilhelm changed quickly to
the English William. In the eleventh century, William II,
known as Rufus, came to the throne after his father. He
was succeeded by his brother, Henry I. For centuries, no
other first-born Williams outlived their fathers, so
despite a proliferation of Prince Williams, there was no
other King William until William of Orange and his wife,
Mary, were encouraged to depose James II. William IV
briefly reigned after the death of his brother George IV,
but was succeeded by his niece Queen Victoria. In the late
nineteenth century during the reign of William I, King of
Prussia, the German statesman Otto von Bismarck organized
the unification of Germany. William II of Germany
encouraged the fervent nationalism that led to World War I
and his deposition in 1918. There are also many famous
literary Williams, including the great dramatist William
Shakespeare, poets William Wordsworth, William Blake, and
William Butler Yeats, and American novelist William
Faulkner. William Henry Harrison was the ninth president
of the United States; William McKinley, the twentieth; and
William Howard Taft, the twenty-seventh.
Famous names: William Harvey (anatomist)
William Holden (actor)
William Hurt (actor)
William Penn (founder of Pennsylvania)
William Tell (Swiss hero)
Nicknames: Bill, Billie, Billy, Wiley, Will, Willie, Willy, Wylie
Variations: Giermo, Gugielmo (Italian), Guglielmo (Italian), Guillaume
(French), Guillermo (Spanish), Guillo, Guirmo, Gullermo,
Gurmo, Hiermo, Inermo, Quillermo, Uilleam (Scottish),
Uilliam (Irish), Vihelm (Swedish), Vilhelm (Swedish),
Wilhelm (German), Wilkes, Willem (Dutch), Willet,
Williamson, Willis, Wilmot, Wilson, Wim (Dutch), Wullie
Williamson (see William)
Willis (see William)
Wilmot (see William)
Wilson (see William)
Wim (see William)
Win (see Winn, Winston, Winthrop)
Winn Old English "friend"; also, a form of Winston.
Other spelling: Win
Nicknames: Winnie, Winny
Winnie, Winny (see Winn, Winston)
Winston Old English "Wine's town" or "old friend's town." The
Churchill family made this name famous long before World
War II brought the British prime minister to the attention
of the world. In the seventeenth century, Sir Winston
Churchill was the father of the first Duke of Marlborough.
Nicknames: Win, Winn, Winnie, Winny
Variation: Winton
Winthrop Old English place name Wina's thorp or Wigmund's thorp, a
place name, from thorp, "farm or village." This well-known
New England surname conveys the idea of old wealth and
colonial ancestors.
Famous name: Winthrop Ames (producer)
Nickname: Win
Winton (see Winston)
Witold (see Vito)
Wojciech (see George)
Wood (see Elwood, Haywood)
Woodie (see Haywood, Woody)
Woodrow Old English "a row of woods" or "a row of cottages along a
wood" from wodu [wood] + raw [row]. Woodrow Wilson was the
twenty-eighth president of the United States and the
inspiration for the League of Nations, which was the model
for the United Nations.
Nicknames: Woodie, Woody
Woody Form of Elwood, Forrest, or Woodrow. There may not be a
lot of Woodrows around, but this name has become well
known through longtime Ohio State football coach Woody
Hayes, musicians Woody Guthrie and Woody Herman, and
American movie director and former stand-up comic Woody
Allen.
Other spelling: Woodie
Wullie (see William)
Wylie (see William)