Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Luc

Meaning — Luc is the French masculine form of Luke, from the Latin Lucas — derived from the Greek Loukas, possibly meaning "man from Lucania" (a region of southern Italy) or related to the Greek leukos meaning "bright, white, light". Saint Luke the Evangelist, companion of Paul and author of the third Gospel and Acts of the Apostles, gave the name enduring Christian prestige. In France, Luc has been a classic, clean-cut masculine name.·French origin·Male·LUK

Luc Luc carries the evangelist's gift for clear, compassionate narrative observation — the Gospel of Luke is the most literary and the most concerned with the poor and outcasts. Characters named Luc in French fiction tend to project attentive, perceptive masculinity with a humanitarian warmth, suited to stories of contemporary French life, journalism, medicine, and the documentation of ordinary human experience.

Best genres for Luc

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionHistorical FictionCrime Fiction

Famous characters named Luc

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


Variations & nicknames

LucLucasLukeLuca

Pairs well with

Luc MoreauLuc DupontLuc RenardLuc BernardLuc LeclercLuc Fontaine

Writing a character named Luc?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

Related names


More French names

Victoire

Victoire is a French feminine given name, the French form of Victoria, from the Latin victoria meaning "victory". In Roman religion, Victoria was the goddess of victory. The name was widely used in French royal and aristocratic families — Victoire de France was a daughter of Louis XV — and carries a triumphant, confident beauty that makes it a perennial favourite in French naming.

Thierry

Thierry is a French masculine given name, the French form of the Germanic Theodoric — composed of theud meaning "people, folk" and ric meaning "power, ruler" — thus "ruler of the people". The name was common among Frankish nobility and entered French through the medieval period. It was widely used in France during the 20th century, associated with the fashion designer Thierry Mugler and footballer Thierry Henry.

Jerome

Jérôme is the French masculine form of Jerome, from the Greek Hieronymos meaning "holy name" — composed of hieros (holy, sacred) and onoma (name). Saint Jerome (347–420), the great Biblical scholar who translated the Bible into Latin (the Vulgate), made the name central to Catholic intellectual tradition. In France, Jérôme has been used continuously since the early Christian period.

Denise

Denise is a French feminine given name, the feminine form of Denis — derived from the Greek Dionysios, meaning "devoted to Dionysus", the Greek god of wine and festivity. Saint Denis (Saint Dionysius), the first Bishop of Paris and patron saint of France, martyred on Montmartre in the 3rd century, made Denis one of the most venerated names in France. Denise became a popular feminine form in the 20th century.

Camille

Camille is a French given name used for both men and women, derived from the Latin Camillus — a name used in Roman religion for a young attendant at religious ceremonies. The Latin root may be Etruscan. In France, the name is most associated with the sculptor Camille Claudel, the tragic artistic genius overshadowed by Rodin, and with Camille Desmoulins, the journalist who helped ignite the French Revolution.

Samuel

Samuel is a Hebrew masculine name meaning "God has heard" or "name of God", from shama (heard) and El (God) — or alternatively from sha'al (to ask) and El. The biblical Samuel was the last of the judges of Israel and the first of the prophets, who anointed both Saul and David as kings. The name is widely used in French, Spanish, and Italian contexts, carried by writers including Samuel Beckett, whose French literary career defined 20th-century theatre.


Explore more