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$Unique_ID{PAR00344}
$Font{NP}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Names for Boys: C}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{
Editors of Consumer Guide
Harder, Kelsey}
$Subject{Names Boys C}
$Log{}
The Ultimate Baby Name Book
Names for Boys: C
Cain (see Kane)
Caius (see Cassius)
Cal (see Calvin)
Calicho (see Charles)
Calo (see Charles)
Calv (see Calvin)
Calvin Latin calvinus, "bald." This nickname is popular because
of John Calvin, a Protestant reformer and theologian, and
the founder of the Calvinist Movement. During the
presidency of John Calvin Coolidge, many parents named
their baby boys Calvin. Today, the name is more common in
the southern part of the United States than in other parts
of the country, but the delightful comic strip Calvin and
Hobbes may encourage more parents to choose this name.
Famous name: Calvin Coolidge Julius Caesar Tuskahoma "Buster" McLish
(baseball pitcher)
Nicknames: Cal, Calv, Vinnie, Vinny
Variations: Calvino (Spanish and Italian), Cauvin (French), Chauvin
Calvino (see Calvin)
Cam (see Cameron)
Camerino (see Cameron)
Cameron Latin Cameris, "one from Cameris (an ancient Sabine city)";
also, derived from Celtic "bent nose." This name is very
popular in Scotland, where it's the name of a great clan.
Cameron is used infrequently as a first name. Two great
Scottish theologians, John Cameron and Richard Cameron, are
commemorated when Scottish boys are given this name.
Famous name: Cameron Mitchell (actor)
Nickname: Cam
Variation: Camerino (Spanish)
Can (see Duncan)
Canute (see Knut)
Carel (see Charles)
Carew Latin carus, "dear, beloved"; also, English "fort" and
Welsh caerau, "stony island." This name usually appears
as Cary, and the actor Cary Grant is solely responsible
for the name's popularity.
Nicknames: Carey, Cary
Carey (see Carew)
Carl Old English ceorl, "a man"; also, Old German carl; also, a
form of Charlton. Carl is a very old name that was popular
in the British Isles even before the Norman Conquest. In
the United States, it ranks high among the 100 names most
often given to boys, but it is steadily becoming less
popular.
Famous names: Carl Gustav Jung (psychoanalyst)
Carl Owen "King Carl" "The Meal Ticket" Hubbell
(baseball pitcher)
Carl Sandburg (poet)
Variations: Carlo (Italian), Carlos (Portuguese and Spanish),
Carol (Rumanian), Carolos (Greek), Charlot (French),
Karl (German, Russian, Serbian, Swedish, and Norwegian),
Karlis (Latvian), Karolek (Polish), Karoly (Hungarian)
Carle (see Charles)
Carleton (see Charlton)
Carlino (see Charles)
Carlo (see Carl, Charles)
Carlos (see Carl, Charles)
Carlton, Carleton Variation of Charlton.
Famous name: Carlton W. East (baseball player)
Carlucho (see Charles)
Carmen Hebrew "the garden." This name can be used for both
boys and girls, but in Spanish-speaking countries, it is
more often a masculine name.
Famous name: Carmen Fazone (baseball player)
Carol (see Carl, Charles)
Carolos (see Carl)
Carrel (see Charles)
Carrol (see Charles)
Carter Old English craet, "maker of carts." Carter Dickson is
the pseudonym of John Dickson Carr, a well-known writer of
detective stories.
Cary Old Welsh "dweller at the castle"; also, variation of
Carew or Charles.
Famous name: Cary Grant (actor)
Cas (see Casper)
Casey (see Cassius)
Casper Variation of Jasper. Traditionally, Casper was one of the
Three Kings who came to Bethlehem to worship the baby
Jesus, but there is no biblical mention of the name. Its
association with the friendly cartoon ghost has kept the
name from gaining much popularity in the United States.
Famous name: Casper Weinberger (statesman)
Nicknames: Cas, Gas, Jas
Variations: Gaspar (Spain), Gaspare (Italian), Jaspar (English),
Kaspar (German)
Cass (see Cassius)
Cassius Latin family name. This name became popular after
Shakespeare used it in Julius Caesar as the name of one of
the conspirators with Marcus Junius Brutus to assassinate
Julius Caesar. The name also appears in Antony and
Cleopatra, where it is used for a minor character.
Famous names: Cassius Clay (boxer)
Cassius Marcellus Clay (abolitionist)
Cassius Jackson Keyser (mathematician)
Nicknames: Casey, Cass
Variation: Caius
Cauvin (see Calvin)
Cebastian (see Sebastian)
Cece (see Cecil)
Cecil Latin Caecilius, a Roman family name from caecus, "blind."
This name probably began as a Roman nickname and
developed into a surname. It has been used as a forename
for a long time, but it has never been very popular and
ranks low in the 100 names most often given to boys in the
United States. Because there have been several famous
women saints named Cecilia, the feminine version of the
name has become more popular than Cecil.
Famous names: Cecil Beaton (photographer)
Cecil B. De Mille (movie producer)
Cecil John Rhodes (financier)
Nicknames: Cece, Ces, Cis, Cissy, Sissy
Variations: Cecile (French), Cecilio (Italian and Spanish), Cecilius
(Dutch), Kilian (Irish), Sessylt (Welsh), Sicilio,
Sesilium (Hispanic)
Cecile (see Cecil)
Cecilio (see Cecil)
Cecilius (see Cecil)
Ced (see Cedric)
Cedric First appeared in Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott, who may
have mistaken it for Cerdic, the mythical founder of West
Saxony; also, Cerdic may derive from Welsh Caradawg,
"amiable," or from British Caratacos, "Carthage." The
origin of Cedric is uncertain, but it became popular after
Sir Walter Scott published Ivanhoe, in which Cedric is the
father of the heroine Rowena. The central character in
Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Little Lord Fauntleroy,
published in 1886, also has this name. Cedric ranks within
the 100 most-popular names in the United States.
Famous name: Sir Cedric Hardwicke (actor)
Nicknames: Ced, Cid, Rick, Rickie, Ricky
Variation: Cerdic
Cerdic (see Cedric)
Cerilio (see Cyril)
Cerilo (see Cyril)
Ces (see Cecil)
Ceslovas (see Chester)
Chabalito (see Salvadore)
Chalo (see Gonzales)
Chana (see Felix)
Charalambos (see Charles)
Charles old German carl, "a man"; also, Old English ceorl, "a
man"; also, French from Latin Carolus. Charles has
remained a consistently popular name from the time of
Charlemagne (Charles the Great), the king of the Franks
and emperor of the West. The name came to England with
the Norman conquest, but the native name Carl was more
popular until the royal Stuart family began to use the
name Charles. Its popularity continues today, with
Charles, Prince of Wales, the heir apparent to the throne
of England. In the United States, it ranks near the top
of the 100 most-popular names. Charles is likely to
continue to be a popular name because Americans are
partial to the names of English royalty.
Famous names: Charles Darwin (naturalist)
Charles de Gaulle (WWII French general, later president of
France)
Charles Dickens (novelist)
Charles Augustus Lindbergh (aviator)
Nicknames: Calo, Cary, Charley, Charlie, Charly, Chick, Chicky,
Chico, Chuck, Chucky, Lito
Variations: Calicho, Carel, Carle, Carlino (Hispanic), Carlo (Italian),
Carlos (Portuguese and Spanish), Carlucho, Carol, Carrel,
Carrol (English), Charalambos, Charlot (French), Karl,
Karlik (Czech), Karol, Karolek (Polish), Karolis (Latvian),
Kyriakos (Russian), Tearlach (Irish)
Charley, Charlie, Charly (see Charles, Charlton)
Charlot (see Carl, Charles)
Charlton Old English ceorlatun, "town of freemen," from ceorl
[freeman] + tun [town]; also, "Carl's Town." Parents who
choose the name Charlton are fans of Charlton Heston or
else they want to preserve a family name.
Nicknames: Carl, Charley, Charlie, Charly, Karl
Variations: Carleton, Carlton
Chauvin (see Calvin)
Chavo (see Salvadore)
Chento (see Vincent)
Ches (see Chester)
Cheslav (see Chester)
Chester Latin castrum, "walled town" or "fortress." Chester dates
to the Roman occupation of England, when it referred to
people who lived in the castra, or camp.
Famous names: Chester A. Arthur (21st U.S. president)
Chet Huntley (TV news announcer)
Nicknames: Ches, Chet
Variations: Ceslovas (Latvian), Cheslav (Russian and Ukrainian),
Czeslaw (Polish)
Chet (see Chester)
Chick (see Charles)
Chicky (see Charles)
Chico (see Charles, Francis)
Chimone (see Simon)
Chioke lbo (Nigeria) "gift of God." African children are prized
and treated as welcome gifts for their parents. Chioke
reflects this belief, as do names from other cultures,
including the Hebrew name Jonathan, "gift of the Lord
(God)."
Chombo (see Jerome)
Chomo (see Jerome)
Chresta (see Christian)
Chretien (see Christian)
Chris Shortened form of Christian or Christopher. Although
Chris qualifies as a nickname, it now appears
independently. Chris belongs to the group of short names
that are in vogue, particularly for boys. When Chris is
used as a nickname in the United States, it is usually a
shortened form of Christopher.
Chrissy (see Christian)
Christ (see Christian, Christopher)
Christao (see Christian)
Christian Greek kristos, "anointed one," from Hebrew "Messiah"; also,
Latin Christianus, "Christian"; also, French Christiane.
In the United States, this name isn't used very often for
boys, but Christine, the feminine form, is popular for
girls. While Hispanic-Americans often choose religious
names such as Christ, Jesus, or Christian, other Americans
usually shy away from this kind of name for boys.
Christian was at the height of its historic popularity in
the late seventeenth century because it is the name of the
central allegorical character in John Bunyan's Pilgrim's
Progress. The name continued to be popular throughout the
eighteenth century, but its use began to decline in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Famous names: Christiaan Neethling Barnard (surgeon)
Christian Dior (fashion designer)
Nicknames: Chris, Chrissy, Christ, Christy, Kit, Kris, Krys
Variations: Chresta (Swedish), Chretien (French), Christao
(Portuguese), Christiano (Italian), Christino, Chrystek
(Polish), Cristian (Spanish and Rumanian), Hristina
(Bulgarian), Jaan (Estonian), Kerestel (Hungarian),
Khristian (Russian), Khrystiyiyan, Krista, Kristian,
Krists (Latvian), Krsto, Risto (Serbian)
Christiano (see Christian)
Christino (see Christian)
Christoforo (see Christopher)
Christoforus (see Christopher)
Christoph, Christophe (see Christopher)
Christopher Greek Kristophoros, "Christ bearing" (one who carries
Christ in his heart); also, Latin Christopherus. The name
comes from a legend of a huge, ugly strong man who offered
to carry a small boy across a river. The child grew
heavier and heavier until Christopher thought he would
drown. As he was beginning to despair, the child revealed
himself to be the Christ Child who was carrying the world
on his shoulders. No historic saint exists, only the
allegorical legend. Christopher is the patron of travelers
and car drivers, and his day is July 25. The name has been
used throughout the centuries. In the United States, it
ranks among the top-ten names given to boys.
Famous names: Christopher Columbus (navigator)
Christopher Marlowe (Elizabethan dramatist)
Kris Kristofferson (singer and actor)
Nicknames: Chris, Christ, Christy, Kester, Kit, Kris, Kriss, Kritos,
Stoffel, Tobal, Tobalito
Variations: Christoforo (Italian), Christoforus, Christoph (Russian),
Christophe, Christophorus (French), Cristobal (Spanish),
Cristovao (Portuguese), Hristofor (Bulgarian), Khristoforos
(Greek), Khrystofor (Ukrainian), Kristaps (Latvian),
Kristof (Slovakian and Hungarian), Kristoffer (Swedish)
Christophorus (see Christopher)
Christy (see Christian, Christopher)
Chrystek (see Christian)
Chucho (see Augustus)
Chuck Nickname of Charles. Chuck is primarily a nickname, but
it's occasionally used as a given name. It may become one
of the short, snappy names that are expected to be popular
in the 1990s.
Famous names: Chuck Berry (singer)
Chuck Connors (actor)
Chucky (see Charles)
Church (see Kirk)
Cid (see Cedric)
Cilvestra (see Sylvester)
Cirill (see Cyril)
Cirillo (see Cyril)
Ciro (see Cyril, Cyrus)
Cis (see Cecil)
Cisco (see Francis)
Cissy (see Cecil)
Cladio (see Claud)
Clair, Clare (see Clarence)
Clarence Latin clarus, "bright" or "famous"; also, English from
the Duke of Clarence, who held the dukedom of Clare. This
name came into England at the time of the Norman Conquest.
Two saints in France, one in the seventh century and the
other in the ninth, were named Clarus. The second St.
Clarus lived in Normandy and was martyred in 875. A woman
of the nobility had him beheaded because he refused her
advances. His day is November 4. The Normandy family
Clair or Clarus became the noble family Clare in England,
whose lands were declared a dukedom by Edward III for his
son Lionel, with the latinized title of dux Clarenciae. In
Shakespeare's Richard III, George, the duke of Clarence, is
executed by his brother Edward IV and the Duke of
Gloucester, later Richard III. The play was popular
in the nineteenth century, which resulted in the name
becoming a given name. It ranks in the lower half of the
100 most-popular boys' names in the United States, but it's
rapidly going out of fashion.
Famous name: Clarence Darrow (lawyer)
Nicknames: Clair, Clare
Variations: Clemencio (Spanish), Clement, Clementy (Polish), Klamencas
(Latvian), Klemenis (Greek), Klemens (German), Klement
(Hungarian), Klymentiy (Russian)
Clark Greek kleros and Latin clericus, "religious person,
clergyman"; also, English clerk came to mean "scholar" or
"a man of learning." When this occupational name is
spelled Clark, it reflects the English pronunciation of the
word "clerk." Over the centuries, the word has changed its
meaning from "religious scholar" to "an employee in a
shop or store." The former meaning is still retained in
the word "cleric."
Famous name: Clark Gable (actor)
Variations: Clarke, Clerk, Clerke
Clarke (see Clark)
Claud, Claude Latin claudus, "lame." This Roman family name originally
described a handicap. Robert Graves' novels I, Claudius
and Claudius the God, which became a PBS series, have made
the name familiar to many Americans, but Claude continues
to be more popular in England than it is in the United
States.
Famous names: Emperor Claudius (Roman ruler possibly named for the
handicap)
Claude Debussy (composer)
Claude Monet (painter)
Claude Rains (actor)
Nicknames: Claudy, Clod, Cloyo
Variations: Cladio (Hispanic), Claudicio, Claudino, Claudio
(Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian), Claudius (English),
Claudu (Rumanian), Klaudiusz (Polish), Klavdiya
(Ukrainian), Klavdu (Russian)
Claudicio (see Claud)
Claudino (see Claud)
Claudio (see Claud)
Claudius (see Claud)
Claudu (see Claud)
Claudy (see Claud)
Claus (see Nicholas)
Clay Old English claeg, "clay." This surname was initially
used as a first name to honor Henry Clay, a
nineteenth-century American statesman. Clay was the chief
designer of the Missouri Compromise of 1850.
Famous name: Clay Cole (entertainer)
Cleante (see Cleanth)
Cleantes (see Cleanth)
Cleanth Possibly from Old English claene, "clean, pure"; or from
Greek proper name Cleanthes. Cleanthes was a stoic
philosopher and the successor to Zeno. In John Dryden's
tragedy Cleomenes, Cleanthes is the captain who befriends
Cleomenes. In The Old Law, a play by Philip Massinger,
Thomas Middleton, and Will Rowley, Cleanthes is the son of
Leonides and the model of fatherly devotion. A character
of the name also appears in four of Moliere's plays. The
name is rarely used today.
Famous name: Cleanth Brooks (literary critic)
Variations: Cleante, Cleantes
Cleaveland (see Cleveland)
Clem (see Clement)
Clemencio (see Clarence)
Clement Latin clemens, "kind, gentle, mild, merciful"; also, a
variation of Clarence. Clement was a disciple of St. Paul,
and according to tradition, he was baptized by St. Peter.
Clement was the third pope after Peter and Cletus, and he
was martyred by the Emperor Trajan for preaching to mine
workers. Condemned to death, he was drowned with an anchor
tied to his neck. His day is November 23, and he is the
patron saint of sailors. The name ranks in the lower
quarter of the 100 most-popular boys' names.
Famous name: Clement Attlee (prime minister of Great Britain)
Nicknames: Clem, Clemmie, Clim, Klimek, Lencha, Menz, Te, Tente
Variations: Clemente (Italian and Spanish), Clemento (Portuguese),
Kelemen (Hungarian), Klemens (German), Klement (Polish,
Czech, and Slovakian), Klemo (Czech), Klima (Slovakian),
Kliment (Bulgarian), Klymentiy (Russian and Ukrainian)
Clemente (see Clement)
Clemento (see Clement)
Clementy (see Clarence)
Clemmie (see Clement)
Clerk, Clerke (see Clark)
Cleve (see Cleveland, Clifford, Clive)
Cleveland Old English "cliff land." The name honors Grover
Cleveland, the twenty-second and twenty-fourth president
of the United States.
Famous name: Cleveland Evans (psychologist)
Nicknames: Cleve, Cliff
Variation: Cleaveland
Clevord (see Clifford)
Cliff (see Cleveland, Clifford)
Clifford Old English "a stream-crossing near a cliff." Clifford
became a popular name in the middle part of the twentieth
century. It currently ranks near the middle of the 100
most-popular boys' names.
Famous names: Clifford Philip Case (U.S. senator)
Clifford Odets (playwright)
Cliff Robertson (actor)
Nicknames: Cleve, Cliff, Cliffy
Variation: Clevord
Cliffy (see Clifford)
Clim (see Clement)
Clint (see Clinton)
Clinton Swedish or Danish klinter, "hill town," from Old Norse
klettr [hill] + Old English tun [town]. This name was
given to people who lived in a town on a hill. The name
shows the influence of the Vikings on English names.
Famous name: Clint Eastwood (actor)
Nickname: Clint
Clive Old English clif, "cliff." After Robert Clive conquered
India, this surname became a given name, but it has never
caught on in the United States.
Famous name: Clive Barnes (critic)
Variations: Cleve, Clyve
Clod (see Claud)
Clodoveo (see Louis)
Clotario (see Luther)
Clothaire (see Luther)
Clothar (see Luther)
Clovis (see Louis)
Cloyo (see Claud)
Clyde Celtic "river" or Welsh "heard from far away"; also,
"cleansing" in reference to Clota, a river goddess. Water
names are the oldest names in existence and seem able to
survive well through the years, even though their forms
change so much that positive identification of their
etymology becomes difficult. There is a River Clyde in
Scotland, and the Firth of Clyde is an estuary formed by
the river. The Clydesdale breed of horses originated in
the Clyde valley. In North Wales, a small river is named
Clwyd. The cluster of these names indicates that they
may all refer to a river goddess. The name occurs more
often in Scotland than elsewhere, but it was carried by the
Scots as they moved to new lands. The place name occurs in
New York, Ohio, and Vermont. In the United States, the
name Clyde is not very popular and ranks low in the top-100
names for boys, although it is still used frequently by
people of Scottish descent, particularly in the southern
part of the country.
Famous names: Clyde Cessna (airplane manufacturer)
Clyde Edward McCollough (baseball catcher)
Variation: Clydell
Clydell (see Clyde)
Clyve (see Clive)
Cnut (see Knut)
Coco (see George)
Col (see Colin)
Colacho (see Colin, Nicholas)
Colan (see Colin)
Cole (see Nicholas)
Colin Scottish from Gaelic cailean, "youth" or "cadet"; also,
French Cole, a shortened form of Nicholas. A variation of
this name yields Old King Cole, a mythical king of Britain.
The origin of Colin, however, is in France, where it is a
nickname of Col. It came to England either during or just
after the Norman invasion, and it's had steady use ever
since. Edmund Spenser's Colin Clout's Come Home Again
indicates that the name was used among rural folk, and
Spenser himself used Colin as a pseudonym. The name of the
Collie dog originated in a real Middle English dog's name:
Colle. This is another indication that the name was
commonly used by country people who often give their
animals popular names for people.
Famous names: Colly Cibber (actor and comic playwright)
Cole Porter (musician and composer)
Nicknames: Col, Colacho, Colan, Collie, Collin, Collins
Collie (see Colin)
Collin (see Colin)
Collins (see Colin)
Colton Old English colt-tun, "town where colts are bred"; also,
"Cola's or Koli's town"; can be derived from "coal town."
As a place name, Colton can be found in California and New
York, where towns were named for early settlers.
Con (see Konrad)
Conicho (see Dennis)
Conny (see Konrad)
Conrad (see Konrad)
Constantantinos (see Gustave)
Cort (see Curtis)
Cortland (see Curtis)
Corty (see Curtis)
Court (see Curtis)
Courtlandt (see Curtis)
Courtney (see Curtis)
Cragg (see Craig)
Craig Celtic creag, "crag." This Scottish surname has become
very popular as a given name. It's one of the short names
made of phonetic stops that's now in vogue in the United
States. It ranks very high in the 100 most-popular boys'
names and is increasing in popularity.
Famous names: Craig Morton (football player)
Craig Stevens (actor)
Other spelling: Cragg
Cristian (see Christian)
Cristobal (see Christopher)
Cristovao (see Christopher)
Culaza (see Nicholas)
Cull (see McCullough)
Cullie (see McCullough)
Curcio (see Curtis)
Curt (see Curtis)
Curtis Latin "courtyard"; also, Old French corteis, "courteous."
Introduced into England during or just after the Norman
Conquest, this name may have been a complimentary epitaph
for someone who was especially courteous or courtly. It
may then have become a nickname for this characteristic,
and then become a personal name. Shakespeare used the name
for one of the characters in Taming of the Shrew. Tony
Curtis is the stage name for Bernard Schwartz.
Famous name: Curtis LeMay (WWII general)
Other spelling: Curtiss
Nicknames: Cort, Corty, Curt, Kurt
Variations: Cortland, Court, Courtlandt, Courtney, Curcio
Curtiss (see Curtis)
Cy Nickname of Cyril or Cyrus. This nickname has become a
name in its own right, possibly because of its association
with Cy Young, an outstanding baseball pitcher whose name
was given to an annual award for the best pitcher in the
major leagues.
Cyrek (see Cyril)
Cyril Greek kyrios, "lord, master." Because of its association
with the name Christ, Cyril has had religious connotations
since the time of Jesus. There have been several saints of
this name, including Cyril of Alexander who was
instrumental in clarifying what is now Roman Catholic dogma
regarding the Trinity. Another St. Cyril is known as the
Apostle to the Slavs and for his translations of liturgical
books. He is credited with inventing the Cyrillic alphabet
that is still used in Russia and some Slavic countries. He
was also noted for his insistence on using Slavonic in the
Mass, a departure from Orthodox practice that caused him
and his brother St. Methodius to break with Pope Nicholas I
and led to the establishment of the Greek Orthodox Church.
Famous name: Cyril Ritchard (actor)
Nicknames: Ciro, Cy, Lilo
Variations: Cerilio, Cerilo (Spanish), Cirill (Hungarian), Cirillo
(Italian), Cyrek (Czech and Polish), Cyrildo, Cyrill,
Cyrille (French), Keereel (Russian), Kiril (Bulgarian),
Kyril (German), Kyrillos (Greek), Kyrylo (Ukrainian),
Sirilio, Zyrillus
Cyrildo (see Cyril)
Cyrill, Cyrille (see Cyril)
Cyrus Persian kuru, "throne," and Greek kuros; sometimes
translated "sun," referring to the great Persian king
mentioned in the Old Testament. Cyrus is a biblical name
that is seldom used in the United States. Cyrus foretold
great victories and befriended the Israelites; he issued a
proclamation allowing them to return to the Holy Land.
Famous names: Cyrus McCormick (inventor)
Cyrus Roberts Vance (diplomat)
Nickname: Cy
Variations: Ciro (Portuguese, Italian, and Spanish), Kyros (Greek)
Czeslaw (see Chester)