Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Thierry

Meaning — 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.·French origin·Male·tyeh-REE

Thierry Thierry carries the Frankish robustness of its Germanic root — a name of leaders and men of action that became thoroughly French over the medieval centuries. In contemporary French fiction, Thierry tends to project an approachable confidence and practical competence, suited to stories of modern French middle-class life, provincial towns, or sports and business settings where straightforward masculine energy is at home.

Best genres for Thierry

Historical FictionLiterary FictionContemporary FictionAdventure

Famous characters named Thierry

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


Variations & nicknames

ThierryTheodoricThierriTerry

Pairs well with

Thierry MartinThierry BernardThierry PetitThierry DumontThierry RousseauThierry Leroy

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Claire

Claire is a French feminine given name from the Latin clara meaning "clear, bright, famous". Saint Clare of Assisi (1194–1253), co-founder with Saint Francis of the Poor Clares religious order, gave the name immense prestige in the Catholic world — her name chosen to match her luminous spiritual beauty. In France, Claire has been one of the most enduringly beloved feminine names, combining religious prestige with everyday elegance.

Marthe

Marthe is the French feminine form of Martha, from the Aramaic Marta meaning "mistress, lady of the house" — the feminine form of mar meaning "lord, master". In the New Testament, Martha of Bethany — sister of Mary and Lazarus — represents the active life of practical service, famously contrasted with her sister Mary's contemplative listening. The name has been used in France since the early Christian era and was a common 20th-century name.

Paul

Paul is a French masculine given name from the Latin Paulus, a Roman family name meaning "small" or "humble", from the adjective paulus. Saint Paul the Apostle — born Saul of Tarsus — transformed the name's meaning from a Roman cognomen into a Christian emblem of conversion and missionary zeal. In France, Paul has been one of the most classic masculine names for centuries, borne by poets, philosophers, and saints.

Joseph

Joseph derives from the Hebrew Yosef, meaning "God will add" or "God shall increase", from the root yasaf. It passed through Greek and Latin into French as Joseph, becoming widespread across the Catholic world through the biblical patriarch and Saint Joseph, foster father of Jesus. In French-speaking contexts the name carries centuries of religious and literary weight.

Danny

Danny is an English diminutive of Daniel, from the Hebrew Daniyel meaning "God is my judge" — composed of din (judgment) and El (God). As a standalone given name in French and Spanish contexts, Danny represents the adoption of English-language diminutive naming culture that became fashionable in France and Spain in the second half of the 20th century, following American cultural influence through film, music, and television.

Julie

Julie is the French feminine form of Julia, derived from the Latin Julius — an ancient Roman family name possibly related to the Greek word for "soft-haired" (ioulos) or to the Latin Iovilius meaning "devoted to Jupiter". In France, Julie gained enormous literary resonance through Rousseau's epistolary novel Julie, ou la Nouvelle Héloïse (1761), one of the best-selling novels of the 18th century.


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