Corran, pronounced KOR-uhn, is a masculine appellation whose etymological taproot plunges into Old Irish corrán—“little crescent” or, rather more prosaically, “sickle”—a metaphorical sliver of silver that once guided farmers and seafarers by night. From the peninsular quiet of Scotland’s Corran Narrows to An Corrán of County Mayo, the term has long served as a geographic shorthand for places where land bends like a scimitar into water; thus, the given name arrives freighted with the aura of coastal mists and tidal patience. In a deft leap from peat-scented shore to hyperspace, Corran also acquired pop-cultural gravitas via Corran Horn, the laconic Jedi of the Star Wars literary canon—a reminder, perhaps, that a crescent may wax into a full-blown saga when the narrative tide is right. Demographically, the name drifts at the liminal edge of American familiarity: since 2000 it has appeared in the national registers only a handful of times per year (never straying far from rank 900), offering parents a statistical rara avis—recognizable enough to pronounce, rare enough to savor. In sum, Corran melds antiquity with aerodynamic modernity, brandishing its moon-shaped etymology like a scholar’s sickle: precise, lightly ironic, and perfectly suited to reap distinction from the common field of boys’ names.
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