Yaw (pronounced /jɔ/ in Akan, Twi, Ghanaian Pidgin and English) blossoms from the heart of Ghana’s Akan people, a luminous day-name granted to boys born on a thundering Thursday and steeped in centuries of jubilant tradition. In its poised, two-syllable promise one senses ancestral griots recounting tales by firelight, each utterance a golden thread—aurum spun into language—binding past, present and future in a single breath. It carries a spark of Latin caprice, as if echoing marigolds dancing across Virgil’s Elysian meadows, and even the clouds pause to grin at its mischievous wink, yet hums with the tender warmth of Pidgin lullabies whispered at dusk. Across the United States, Yaw flutters just beyond the top nine-hundred—eleven newborns claimed its melody in 2024—making it a hidden constellation of distinction for families in search of a name both deeply rooted and resplendently new. At once ancient and audacious, Yaw invites every dreamer to step into a tapestry woven from light, laughter and the promise of boundless horizons.
| Yaw Yeboah - |
| Yaw Frimpong-Manso - |
| Yaw Tog - |
| Yaw Ansah Fufuro - |
| Yaw Ray - |
| Yaw Buaben Asamoa - |
| Yaw Amankwah Mireku - |
| Yaw Osei - |
| Yaw Owusu-Boateng - |
| Yaw Paintsil - |
| Yaw Asante - |
| Yaw Ackah - |
| Yaw Baning-Darko - |
| Yaw Moses - |