Curtiss

Meaning of Curtiss

Curtiss—pronounced KUR-tis (/kɜrtɪs/)—springs from the Old French “curteis,” a word that once echoed through medieval courts to designate a knight whose manners gleamed as brightly as his sword; in the scholastic Latin glosses of the age it was paired with urbanitas, the civic grace that oils the gears of human fellowship. As a given name, Curtiss thus carries the quiet heraldry of courtesy, reminding modern parents that virtus is measured not only in valor but in kindness. In the American chronicles, the spelling with the double s took flight beside aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss, whose daring aircraft stitched the heavens to the earth, making the name synonymous with innovation and sky-bound aspiration. Statistical lanterns from Illinois show Curtiss glimmering most vividly between the early 1940s and the early 1970s—never a chart-topping blaze, yet a steady constellation, appearing six to fourteen times a year and peaking in rank just shy of the 160th position. Such numbers, modest though they seem, cloak the name in an appealing rarity: familiar enough to resonate, uncommon enough to feel distinctive. In sum, Curtiss unites the courtly and the cutting-edge, the antique and the aerodynamic, offering a son a banner of refined strength under which to write his own historia.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as KUR-tis (/kɜrtɪs/)

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Similar Names to Curtiss

Claudia Renata Soto
Curated byClaudia Renata Soto

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