Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Adam

Meaning — Adam is a Hebrew masculine name meaning "man" or "earth" — from the Hebrew adamah meaning "ground, earth", relating to the creation of the first man from clay. As the name of the first human being in Genesis, it is the ultimate founding name of the Judeo-Christian tradition and has been used in French, Spanish, and Italian since the early Christian era. It remains widely used in Francophone contexts.·French origin·Male·a-DAM

Adam Adam carries the paradoxical weight of the first name — origin and archetype, innocent and fallen, entirely individual yet universal. In French literary fiction, Adam tends to belong to characters who are beginnings of something: new generations, reinvented selves, or men placed at the starting point of a story that will define them. The name projects a quiet but deep humanity suited to existentialist and realist fiction.

Best genres for Adam

Literary FictionHistorical FictionContemporary FictionDystopian Fiction

Famous characters named Adam

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

AdamAdamoAdánAdem

Pairs well with

Adam MoreauAdam DupontAdam BernardAdam RenardAdam LefebvreAdam Garnier

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Martine

Martine is a French feminine given name, the French feminine form of Martin, which derives from the Latin Martinus — a diminutive of Martius, meaning "of Mars", the Roman god of war. Saint Martin of Tours, the patron saint of France, made the name enormously popular in the French-speaking world. The feminine Martine became especially common in France in the 20th century.

Therese

Thérèse is the French feminine form of Teresa, of uncertain but likely Greek origin — possibly from theresia meaning "harvester" or from the island of Thera (Santorini). Saint Thérèse of Lisieux (1873–1897), the "Little Flower", whose autobiography The Story of a Soul became one of the most widely read spiritual texts of the 20th century, made the name deeply beloved in France. Thérèse Raquin gave it a darker literary dimension.

Adelaide

Adelaide is a feminine given name from the Old High German Adalheidis, composed of adal meaning "noble" and heid meaning "kind, sort, type" — thus "of noble kind" or "noble natured". It entered French and Italian use through the medieval Frankish and Lombard aristocracy. In Italy, Adelaïde of Susa was a powerful 11th-century marchioness. The French Adélaïde was borne by a sister of Louis XVI.

Dylan

Dylan is a Welsh masculine name from the Mabinogion — composed of dy meaning "great" and llanw meaning "sea, tide" — thus "great sea" or "son of the sea wave". In Welsh mythology Dylan eil Ton was a sea god. The name entered French and Spanish use through the cultural influence of the singer-songwriter Bob Dylan (born Robert Zimmerman), who took the name from the poet Dylan Thomas. It is now used in France and Spain as a fashionable given name.

Edith

Édith is a name used in French, an adoption of the Old English Eadgyth, composed of ead meaning "wealth, fortune, prosperity" and gyth meaning "war, battle" — thus "prosperous in war". The name was introduced to France through contact with England and became naturalized in French. In France the name is forever linked to Édith Piaf, the iconic Parisian singer, making Édith synonymous with authentic working-class French feeling and tragic grandeur.

Ian

Ian is the Scottish Gaelic form of John, from the Hebrew Yochanan meaning "God is gracious". The name entered French and Italian use primarily through British cultural influence — particularly through the novels and films associated with Ian Fleming, the James Bond author — and became fashionable in France and Spain in the late 20th century. It is the most directly Celtic-derived given name in common French and Spanish use.


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