Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Drake

Meaning — From the Old English draca or Old Norse draki, meaning "dragon" or "serpent" — ultimately from the Latin draco and Greek drakon, also meaning "dragon" or "serpent." As an English surname it also sometimes referred to a male duck (drake, from Old English ened-race, "duck-kind"). The name transferred to given-name use and carries strong associations with maritime adventure through the fame of Sir Francis Drake, the Elizabethan privateer and circumnavigator.·Old English origin·Male·DRAYK

Drake Drake is a name that arrives with implied danger and ambition — the dragon root gives it a mythic edge that suits bold, risk-taking protagonists who operate at the edges of the permissible. It is equally at home in a high-seas adventure, a contemporary thriller, or a fantasy world where the protagonist's name announces, before anything else, that this person is someone to reckon with.

Best genres for Drake

AdventureFantasyThrillerHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Drake

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


Variations & nicknames

DrakeDraco

Pairs well with

Drake AshwoodDrake CallowayDrake HargroveDrake LangleyDrake PrescottDrake Weston

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More Old English names

Heather

From the Old English hæddre, the name of the low-growing flowering shrub (Calluna vulgaris) native to the heathlands and moors of Scotland and northern England. The spelling was reshaped in the 18th century by association with the word heath. Heather was rarely given as a personal name before the 19th century; its popularity peaked in the 1970s and 1980s in the English-speaking world.

Peyton

From an Old English place name and surname meaning "Pæga's settlement" or "Pæga's town" — Pæga being an Old English personal name. Peyton entered American given-name use in the 19th century and became popular as a gender-neutral name in the 21st century, in part through the fame of NFL quarterback Peyton Manning. In the American South it carries a strong traditions of use as a family surname passed down as a given name.

Ashton

From an Old English place name and surname meaning "ash tree settlement" — from æsc ("ash tree") and tun ("settlement," "enclosure," or "town"). Ashton was in use as a surname in England from the medieval period and transferred to given-name use in the English-speaking world, gaining considerable popularity in the United States and Australia from the 1990s onward.

Madisen

An alternate spelling of Madison, originally an English surname meaning "son of Maud" or "son of Matthew," from the medieval given name Maud (itself a Norman French form of Matilda, meaning "mighty in battle"). Madison rose to popularity as a female given name in the United States following the 1984 film Splash. Madisen is a phonetic respelling that softens the surname feel.

Braxton

An English surname derived from a place name — Bracca's tun in Old English, meaning "Bracca's settlement" or "farmstead," where Bracca is a personal name possibly from an Old Norse root. It transferred to use as a given name in the United States, particularly in the South, during the 19th and 20th centuries. General Braxton Bragg, a Confederate commander, made the name broadly known in American history.

Furman

From the English surname Furman, possibly derived from the Old English forman meaning "ferryman" or from a Germanic root meaning "leader, foremost man" (related to the German Fuhrmann meaning "coachman, driver"). The surname became a given name in American usage, particularly in the American South, often used to honor family surnames.


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