Gary and Garry are English language masculine given names.

Gary
Gary Cooper from Eiga no Tomo [ja] (November 1952)
GenderMale
Origin
Language(s)Germanic language
MeaningSpear, Spear king
Other names
Alternative spellingGarry, Garey
Variant form(s)none
Nickname(s)Gaz, Gazza, Gal

Etymology

edit

Gary is likely derived from the Norman French name Geiree, itself descended from the Old Frankish[1] name Geiserich, composed of two elements: "*gaizaz" (spear, pike, javelin) plus "*rīkijaz" (kingly, royal).[2][3][4]

A variant form of Gary is Garry, the spelling of which has been influenced by that of Barry. An informal pet form of Gary is Gaz,[2][3] a variant of which is Gazza.[2]

A given name associated with Gary and Garry is Garrison; the latter is sometimes borne by sons of men bearing the former names.[3][5] The Gaelic Garaidh is also associated with Gary.[3]

Because of the "Gare" sound at the beginning in American English, Gary is sometimes incorrectly thought to be a diminutive of Garrett, although the names are unrelated.

History

edit

The usage of Gary as a given name is intertwined with the success of the actor Gary Cooper (1901–1961). The American industrialist Elbert Henry Gary left his name to the town of Gary, Indiana. The theatrical agent Nan Collins, who lived in this town, suggested the name Gary to Frank Cooper, one of her clients, who went on to have a successful film career as Gary Cooper.

According to the Social Security Administration,[6] Gary was relatively rare as a given name in the 1900–1920s period (e.g., in the 1910s it was the 677th most frequent name, given to less than 0.01% of the babies born in that decade). In the 1930s, 0.38% of the male babies in the United States were named Gary, and in the 1950s as many as 1.54% of them were given this name, making it the 12th most popular given name of that decade. The name reached its record popularity (9th place) in 1954, the year after Cooper received his Best Actor Academy Award for his leading role in High Noon. Since then, the popularity of Gary as a given name in the United States has been on a slow but steady decline. In the 1990s, the name was the 170th most popular, given to around 0.1% of newborn males.

In the United Kingdom, the name's popularity was assisted in the later 20th century by the prominence of cricket player Gary Sobers (whose first name was a pet form of Garfield),[2][3] association football player Gary Lineker,[2] and musician Gary Glitter (originally Paul Gadd).[3]. Its popularity peaked during the 1960s (it was the 16th most popular male name in 1964) and still ranked as high as 26th in 1984, but by the 1990s had fallen out of the top 100.[7] In 2013, only 28 babies born in England and Wales were named Gary, leading Garys to be labeled a "dying breed".[8]

People

edit

Frequent combinations

edit

Computer science, engineering, science and medicine

edit
  • Gary Becker, American economist
  • Gary Evans, Psychologist and professor of Human Ecology in the Cornell University College of Human Ecology
  • Gary Fisher, one of the inventors of the modern mountain bike
  • Gary Kildall, American computer scientist, microcomputer entrepreneur
  • Gary Kreps, American health and risk communication scholar
  • Gary McKinnon, Scottish systems administrator, hacker
  • Garry Newman, founder of British video game developer Facepunch Studios, namesake of the popular game Garry's Mod.

Entertainment

edit

Law, military, and community service

edit

Literature and the arts

edit

Musicians

edit

Politics

edit

Sports

edit

Crime

edit

Fictional characters

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Geiserich".
  2. ^ a b c d e Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia (2006), A dictionary of first names (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, pp. 106–107, ISBN 978-0-19-861060-1
  3. ^ a b c d e f Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia (2003), A dictionary of first names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-860605-5
  4. ^ "Gary", Dictionary.com, retrieved 24 July 2013
  5. ^ Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia (2006), A dictionary of first names (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, p. 107, ISBN 978-0-19-861060-1
  6. ^ Social Security Administration – Popular Baby Names
  7. ^ babynames.co.uk
  8. ^ Schopen, Fay (2015-03-11). "We should cherish our Garys: they're a dying breed". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-10-01.