baby name EverestThe baby name Everest combines the natural world with high achievement.

Thanks to Urban Angel for suggesting our Baby Name of the Day.

EVARISTUS

The baby name Everest brings to mind a colossal – and legendary – peak. But it actually connects nicely to a given name with plenty of history and a strong meaning, too.

Sometime around the year 100, Evaristus served as pope in Rome. While little of his backstory remains, the name persists in Spanish and Italian – Evaristo – as well as the French Évariste. While Everest isn’t directly related to Evaristus, it seems like a logical English form.

As for meaning, Evaristus comes from Greek. The first element, eu, means good, and the second, arestos, means pleasing. Ten boys were named Evaristo in the US in 2020, but the other two forms are virtually unknown.

SIR GEORGE

The mountain’s name has nothing to do with Greek.

The highest mountain on Earth, the Himalaya’s Mount Everest stands over 29,000 feet tall, on the border between Nepal and Tibet. This lends the baby name Everest the sheen of a modern virtue name, signaling achievement – or maybe a sense of grand aspiration.

Of course, the mountain’s name is a subject of some debate. Locals call the peak Qomolangma, Chajamlangma, Sagarmāthā, Zhumulangma and Chomolangma. The native names were in use in 1856 when British surveyor Andrew Waugh put the mountain on the map. While the surveyors preserved local names elsewhere, in this case, Waugh insisted that wasn’t possible. Instead he suggested the peak be named after his predecessor as British Surveyor General of India, Colonel Sir George Everest.

Everest himself opposed the idea. Maybe he was embarrassed by the honor, but he was also concerned that Everest couldn’t be pronounced by the locals. The European name remains a sore point in the region today. The local names all translate to something along the lines of Holy Mother. Doubtless it feels insulting to have a random British surveyor’s name supplant a goddess.

But the name has stood all this time. As for Sir George, his family surname comes from Evreux, in the Normandy region of France. In turn, Evreux took its name from the Gaulish tribe that settled the area. And their name? It likely came from the tribe’s name for the yew tree. No matter what, the baby name Everest seems to lead back to the natural world.

French history includes the comtes d’Évreux from the tenth century onward. The US Air Force used Évreux-Fauville Air Base into the 1960s, and the French military has used it since.

EXPEDITION

Back to the mountain.

Scaling Mount Everest is no small feat, and many have perished in the attempt. Books and movies, as well as countless articles, have chronicled these tales. Jon Krakauer scored a New York Times bestseller in 1996 with Into Thin Air.  The Discovery Channel turned the trips offered by one company into a reality TV series in 2006 and 2007. In 2015, a major motion picture re-told the 1996 story, with Jake Gyllenhaal as the American expedition group leader. It was a commercial success, often debuting in IMAX theaters.

Perhaps this is one of the challenges with the baby name Everest. It suggests tremendous challenge and achievement, but also risk – and tragedy.

Disney World unveiled Expedition Everest at their Animal Kingdom theme park in 2006. It’s a thrill ride, but with a more fantastic bent – they’ve worked a Yeti into their coaster, one of the few perils not reported by climbers. It’s cemented the tie between Everest and adventure for millions of visitors who will never set foot in Nepal.

BY the NUMBERS

But never mind the Yetis.

The baby name Everest succeeds on sound, too.

We love a great middle V name. And Ev is enjoying a moment. Just ask Everett, a surname name with Old English roots that entered the US Top 100 in 2018.

A small number of boys have received the baby name Everest over the years.

Five boys were named Everest in 1914, perhaps because British explorer John Noel had attempted to reach the peak the prior year. The successful 1953 expedition of Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay doesn’t seem to have had an impact.

But names changed over the next few decades.

In 1998, 19 boys received the name, as coverage of the 1996 tragedy continued. By 2015, US families welcomed 111 boys and 29 girls with the baby name Everest.

PAW PATROL

What moved the needle on the baby name Everest?

It might be down to the dogs.

In 2013, PAW Patrol debuted on Nickelodeon. The Canadian animated series introduced the world to a team of heroic pups. It’s currently at nine seasons and counting, with a movie set to debut in 2021. Ryder is the school-aged human leader of the canine crew. The dogs include Chase, Marshall, Skye, Rocky, Zuma, Rubble … and, starting in season two, Everest.

Everest specializes in snow rescue. She’s a Siberian Husky, of course. And yes, she’s a she.

While it seems like odd inspiration for a child’s name, the combination of factors – a stylish sound, the ideas about challenge and achievement, ties to the natural world – combined. And plenty of toddlers’ parents probably got used to hearing the name Everest on the screen around the time they were considering possibilities for a new baby.

RUGGED and ASPIRATIONAL

As of the year 2020, the baby name Everest was given to 84 girls and 214 boys. That’s enough to tip Everest into the boys’ Top 1000 at #982.

It’s a name that feels rugged and strong. And it’s hard not to hear Everest and think of adventure and achievement. The name brings to mind the grandeur of the natural world.

And, given how very stylish and current it sounds, it’s easy to see why parents are embracing the baby name Everest.

What do you think of the baby name Everest?

First published on June 29, 2010, this post was revised substantially and re-published on July 23, 2021.

baby name Everest

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?

26 Comments

  1. I am debating about Everest. I climbed Everest Base Camp not knowing I was pregnant. So my hubby thinks it would be great to name the baby Everest if he’s a boy… What do you think?

    Thanks!

    1. It works! It might be mistaken for Everett some of the time, but wow – what a GREAT story you have. Plus, Everest signals achievement. And many parents balk at place names borrowed from places the parents haven’t been – but you clearly have, and so has your son!

      Yeah, I might hesitate if you just always vaguely liked the idea of climbing there, or even if you’d climbed there years ago … but given the circumstances, it’s almost like he named himself, isn’t it?

  2. I LOVE my mom’s name. Everest Cade (middle) We named him after my brother whose middle name is Everest. My dad picked the name in the 80’s and of course my brother was so honored. It helps that my brother is 6’5″ and very masculine. I associate the name with him. My little man is just now 4 months old and has a twin sister named Evelyn. 🙂

    Love my baby boy’s name! I hope it doesn’t become trendy!

    1. Wow – I love Everest Cade. A great combination of sounds, and how incredibly cool that it honors your brother! Does Evelyn’s name have a story?

  3. I too thought it would be unique when i
    Named my son Everest 8 years ago

    He loves it
    And tells people he is named after a mountain

    He likes to look at Everest on google earth