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Conlen
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Descendant of Conall; Conall means 'strong as a hound' or 'high valor'. |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conleth
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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 |
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Conley
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Descendant of Conghal; 'valorous hound' or 'hound of valor' |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conlin
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Anglicized Irish name related to Conall - 'descendant' or 'little Conall', with Conall interpreted as 'strong wolf' or 'valorous hound'. |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conlon
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Descendant of Conallán - from Conall, meaning 'strong as a wolf' or 'highly valorous'. |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connacht
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From the Irish province Connacht - 'descendants/people of Conn' (referring to the legendary Conn) |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connal
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From the Gaelic Conall, commonly interpreted as 'strong wolf' or 'high, mighty'. |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connall
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From Old Irish con 'hound/wolf' + gal 'valor' - 'strong wolf' or 'valorous hound' |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connan
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From Gaelic meaning "little hound" (sometimes rendered "little wolf") |
Irish, Scottish Gaelic |
Boy |
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Connel
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From Gaelic Conall: 'strong wolf' or 'valiant hound' (strength, valor). |
Gaelic, Irish |
Boy |
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Connell
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From Old Irish Conall, meaning 'strong wolf' or 'valiant/strong hound.' |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connelle
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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 |
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Connelly
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‘Descendant of Conghal’ - Conghal is interpreted as 'valorous/strong in battle' (often rendered figuratively as a 'valiant hound') |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conner
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lover of hounds / wolf-lover |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connla
|
chieftain's son (little chief) |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connlaodh
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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 |
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Connlaoi
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From Gaelic elements con/conn (hound or chief); commonly rendered 'little hound' or 'chief's son/descendant.' |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connlaoth
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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 |
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Connley
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Descendant of Conghalach - "valorous hound" or "hound of valor" |
Irish |
Boy |
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Connor
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Derived from Old Irish Conchobar, commonly interpreted as "lover of hounds" or "hound-desiring". |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conor
|
lover of hounds (often interpreted as 'wolf-lover' or 'hound-lover') |
Irish |
Boy |
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Conway
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From the Welsh placename Conwy - 'from the River Conwy' (literally 'chief/important river' or 'high water') |
English, Irish, Welsh |
Boy |
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Corb
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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 |
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Corbmac
|
chariot‑son (son of the chariot) - i.e., charioteer |
Gaelic, Irish |
Boy |
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Corcoran
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“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 |
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Corigan
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Derived from Ó Corragáin, 'descendant of Corragán'; Corragán is a diminutive of corra, often interpreted as 'little spear' or 'spear-wielder'. |
Irish |
Boy |
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Cormac
|
Likely 'charioteer' or 'son of the chariot' (sometimes associated with 'raven') |
Irish |
Boy |
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Cormack
|
Charioteer |
Gaelic, Irish |
Boy |
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Cormag
|
Charioteer; literally 'son of the chariot' |
Gaelic, Irish |
Boy |
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Cormic
|
Charioteer; 'son of the chariot' |
Irish |
Boy |
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