Finnick

#86 in Iowa

Meaning of Finnick

Finnick is a relatively recent arrival to given-name territory, most plausibly forged by grafting the Gaelic root “Finn” (“fair, white”) onto an English surname ending, with popular culture supplying the final polish. Virtually absent from U.S. birth data until 2012—the year a certain trident-bearing victor stepped off the pages of Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games—the name has since bounced between 9 and 159 annual registrations, hovering in the mid-700s for national rank. Its two-syllable, front-loaded phonetics (FIN-ik) ride the current Anglo-American appetite for brisk, clean sounds while skirting the overexposure of the shorter Finn. Literary associations lend the name an oceanic, athletic undertone, yet its etymology also gestures toward the “fair-haired youth” of earlier Celtic lore, giving it a pedigree that predates the multiplex. Seen in that light, Finnick sits at the crossroads of modern media influence and traditional linguistic material, offering parents a choice that feels fresh without being experimentally obscure.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as FIN-ik (/ˈfɪn.ɪk/)

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Laura Gibson
Curated byLaura Gibson

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