baby name AdairThe baby name Adair offers a light, lithe sound with a bright, confident appeal.

Thanks to Kristin and Leigh for suggesting our Baby Name of the Day.

EDGAR’S COUSIN

Way back in the tenth century, King Edgar the Peaceable ruled England.

His name comes from the Old English ead – wealth. It’s the basis of a great many Ed- names we use today: think Edwin, Edith, Edward.

Like most Anglo-Saxon names, it didn’t survive the Norman Invasion.

But Sir Walter Scott gave the name to a fictional Edgar in his 1819 novel The Bride of Lammermoor. It’s a romantic tragedy; you might also know it from the 1835 Donizetti opera, Lucia di Lammermoor.

Scott’s novel typically gets credit for a resurgence in the name’s use.

Why all this talk of Edgar? It’s almost certainly the forerunner of the baby name Adair.

Drop the ‘g’ sound and it’s not such a stretch. Apparently the spelling Eadyear may help bridge Edgar to Adair.

CAPTAIN ADAIR and OTHER NOTABLES

The surname is in use from the 1400s onward, spreading from Scotland to Ireland to elsewhere.

In the nineteenth century, Captain John Adair made a mint in the US, then returned home to Ireland intent of building a palatial country home to rival the royal estate Balmoral. Adair’s Glenveagh Castle nearly succeeded. It’s now part of Glenveagh National Park.

Other notables to wear the surname include athletes and scientists, as well as:

  • Legendary vaudeville actor Jean Adair, best known as the cheerfully murderous Aunt Martha in Arsenic and Old Lace. Adair originated the role on Broadway and starred in the movie version with Cary Grant, too.
  • Poet Virginia Hamilton Adair.
  • Nineteenth century Cherokee Nation leader William Penn Adair had a very famous namesake – William Penn Adair Rogers, better known as cowboy comedian Will Rogers.
  • For over a century, there was an Adair Baronetcy, created in 1838, and extinct as of 1988.

That’s just the tiniest sliver of a list.

DAISY ADAIR

If you recall the short-lived Showtime series Dead Like Me, you might remember Daisy Adair.

In brief: main character Georgia was an eighteen year old slacker with a dead end job. She meets a bizarre accidental death, only to find that she’s been assigned to another dead end job – literally. Georgia becomes part of the local crew of grim reapers, responsible for helping souls cross over into the afterlife. Daisy Adair is one of George’s fellow reapers, a former Hollywood starlet who claims to have died on the set of Gone With the Wind.

It’s an obscure reference, and yet, the show was something of a cult classic. It ran for two seasons, 2003 to 2004, and inspired a made-for-TV movie in 2009.

ADDIE

The biggest reason to think the baby name Adair might succeed today isn’t a fictional character or any historical figure.

It’s countless girls answering to an Addie name.

The current US Top 1000 includes Addison, Adalyn, Adeline, Adelaide, Ada, Adalynn, Adelyn, Adaline, Adelynn, Addilynn, Addilyn, Adelina, Adley, Adalee, Adele, and Addyson. That is a lot of Addie names.

This raises the possibility that Adair could offer a similar-but-slightly-different option for a daughter or a masculine form for a son. Think of Milo and Millie, Isla and Isaiah. Names don’t have to share roots to rise at the same time. Sometimes a stylish sound can be every bit as powerful.

BY THE NUMBERS

Speaking of gender, the baby name Adair is used is almost equal numbers for boys and girls alike as of 2019.

In 2019, 30 girls and 34 boys received the name.

Ten years ago, the picture looked very different: 10 girls and 93 boys were given the baby name Adair.

And in 1997? 27 girls and 15 boys.

Unlike many names, there’s no consistent trendline. The baby name Adair has shifted from more-masculine to more-feminine over the last one hundred years. But it’s always been in use, in small numbers, from the 1910s onward.

CONFIDENT and LITHE

The baby name Adair occupies that rare space. It’s truly unisex, and almost completely undiscovered.

The “dare” sound lends it plenty of adventurous spirit. But history anchors it, too.

It might be a way to honor an Edgar on your family tree. Or it might simply be a bright choice for a child, graceful and appealing, perfectly in step with current trends but still a distinctive, unexpected choice.

What do you think of the baby name Adair?

First published on June 20, 2011, this post was revised substantially and re-posted on May 6, 2021.

baby name Adair

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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What do you think?

25 Comments

  1. My two-year old daughter is named Adair and I love it more every day. My mother’s family is Scott/Irish and I went on a trip to Ireland with dear friends and stayed on the grounds of Adare Manor – so I’ll always have a positive association with that beautiful place.

    1. Another 2010 daughter named Adair here. 🙂 Nice to meet one more of the 35 born that year!

  2. I’m female, 20 – my mom named me Adair. Apparently it goes back a ways as a last name in our scottish family tree (just for males though). My mom just liked it as a first name…

    I love my name Adair, but I’ve gone by Addie all my life. I’ve never thought of it as gender neutral before, that’s interesting!

  3. Adair is a first name for females in my family, going back a couple of generations now. We pronounce it Uh-dair. I think it is a beautiful name, and it is difficult for me to imagine it for a boy.

  4. i stumbled upon this site while doing research for my first name… i’m a female Adair, and i love my name! i’ve seen it pronounced A-dair (a character on the tv show Upright Citizens Brigade), but i pronounce mine as Uh-dair. i’ve always received compliments on my name’s uniqueness. it’s fun being the only Adair in town!

  5. I named my daughter Adair, she was born in 2007. We are American, of Celtic ancestry so I wanted something Celtic and unusual but not hard to spell or pronounce. I have an Irish name and it’s been mangled every which way– I have to repeatedly spell it and correct people’s pronunciation, so I didn’t want to plague her with a name like that.

    We pronounce it uh-dare. Have received tons of compliments on it!

  6. Adair has been completely stuck in my head since Monday, and I think I finally figured out why. The first European child born in the New World was named Virginia Dare, which I have always thought was the most lovely name. Adair has that same vibe–daring yet ladylike.