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Updated May 24, 2023

Boy name origins & meanings

  • Greek : Watchman

Boy name variations

Gregorius

Gregorius

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregorios

Gregorios

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregori

Gregori

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregoire

Gregoire

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregor

Gregor

- 18% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Greger

Greger

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregorio

Gregorio

- 8% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregoor

Gregoor

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Griogair

Griogair

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grioghar

Grioghar

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregus

Gregus

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gragos

Gragos

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Greis

Greis

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grischa

Grischa

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grigor

Grigor

+ 13% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grigori

Grigori

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gries

Gries

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gero

Gero

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Greg

Greg

- 37% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Graig

Graig

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Greig

Greig

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregg

Gregg

+ 33% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Gregson

Gregson

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grig

Grig

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grigg

Grigg

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Grigson

Grigson

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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McGregor

McGregor

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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How Popular Is The Name Gregory

Family name origins & meanings

  • English : from a personal name that was popular throughout Christendom in the Middle Ages. The Greek original, Grēgorios, is a derivative of grēgorein ‘to be awake’, ‘to be watchful’. However, the Latin form, Gregorius, came to be associated by folk etymology with grex, gregis, ‘flock’, ‘herd’, under the influence of the Christian image of the good shepherd. The Greek name was borne in the early Christian centuries by two fathers of the Orthodox Church, St. Gregory Nazianzene (c. 325–390) and St. Gregory of Nyssa (c. 331–395), and later by sixteen popes, starting with Gregory the Great (c. 540–604). It was also the name of 3rd- and 4th-century apostles of Armenia. In North America the English form of the name has absorbed many cognates from other European languages. (For forms, see Hanks and Hodges 1988).

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