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Irish Baby Boy Names

Name Meaning Origins Gender
Conlen Descendant of Conall; Conall means 'strong as a hound' or 'high valor'. Irish Boy
Conleth From Old Irish elements with con meaning 'hound' (or 'warrior'); the exact second element is uncertain - commonly interpreted broadly as 'hound/valiant hound'. Associated with the early Irish saint Conleth. Irish Boy
Conley Descendant of Conghal; 'valorous hound' or 'hound of valor' Irish Boy
Conlin Anglicized Irish name related to Conall - 'descendant' or 'little Conall', with Conall interpreted as 'strong wolf' or 'valorous hound'. Irish Boy
Conlon Descendant of Conallán - from Conall, meaning 'strong as a wolf' or 'highly valorous'. Irish Boy
Connacht From the Irish province Connacht - 'descendants/people of Conn' (referring to the legendary Conn) Irish Boy
Connal From the Gaelic Conall, commonly interpreted as 'strong wolf' or 'high, mighty'. Irish Boy
Connall From Old Irish con 'hound/wolf' + gal 'valor' - 'strong wolf' or 'valorous hound' Irish Boy
Connan From Gaelic meaning "little hound" (sometimes rendered "little wolf") Irish, Scottish Gaelic Boy
Connel From Gaelic Conall: 'strong wolf' or 'valiant hound' (strength, valor). Gaelic, Irish Boy
Connell From Old Irish Conall, meaning 'strong wolf' or 'valiant/strong hound.' Irish Boy
Connelle From Irish Conall/Connell: generally interpreted as 'strong wolf' or 'valorous hound' and by extension 'chief/leader' (also 'descendant of Conall' in surname form) Irish Boy
Connelly ‘Descendant of Conghal’ - Conghal is interpreted as 'valorous/strong in battle' (often rendered figuratively as a 'valiant hound') Irish Boy
Conner lover of hounds / wolf-lover Irish Boy
Connla chieftain's son (little chief) Irish Boy
Connlaodh Likely from Old Irish elements con ('hound, warrior') or conn ('chief') with a diminutive/ending; interpreted as 'young hound/hero' or 'descendant of a chief.' Irish Boy
Connlaoi From Gaelic elements con/conn (hound or chief); commonly rendered 'little hound' or 'chief's son/descendant.' Irish Boy
Connlaoth Probably derived from Gaelic elements 'conn' (chief or hound) and a form related to 'laoch/laoth' (hero/warrior), roughly 'chief's hero' or 'heroic descendant of Conn'. Irish Boy
Connley Descendant of Conghalach - "valorous hound" or "hound of valor" Irish Boy
Connor Derived from Old Irish Conchobar, commonly interpreted as "lover of hounds" or "hound-desiring". Irish Boy
Conor lover of hounds (often interpreted as 'wolf-lover' or 'hound-lover') Irish Boy
Conway From the Welsh placename Conwy - 'from the River Conwy' (literally 'chief/important river' or 'high water') English, Irish, Welsh Boy
Corb Likely 'raven' (from Old French corbin); in Irish contexts may derive from old personal/epithet elements (sometimes associated with chariot/war imagery). French, Gaelic, Irish Boy
Corbmac chariot‑son (son of the chariot) - i.e., charioteer Gaelic, Irish Boy
Corcoran “Descendant of Corcrán.” Corcrán likely derives from Irish corcair (“purple”), so roughly “little purple one” or “descendant of the purple/dark(-haired) one.” Irish Boy
Corigan Derived from Ó Corragáin, 'descendant of Corragán'; Corragán is a diminutive of corra, often interpreted as 'little spear' or 'spear-wielder'. Irish Boy
Cormac Likely 'charioteer' or 'son of the chariot' (sometimes associated with 'raven') Irish Boy
Cormack Charioteer Gaelic, Irish Boy
Cormag Charioteer; literally 'son of the chariot' Gaelic, Irish Boy
Cormic Charioteer; 'son of the chariot' Irish Boy