Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Tracy

Meaning — Originally a Norman surname derived from the French place name Tracy-Bocage in Normandy, itself from the Gaulish personal name Thracius, meaning "Thracian." It entered English use as a masculine given name, transferred from the aristocratic surname, but shifted predominantly to feminine use in the mid-20th century, particularly in America, where it was widely popular in the 1960s and 1970s.·Old French origin·Gender-Neutral·TRAY-see

Tracy Tracy is a name lodged firmly in the mid-20th-century American cultural imagination — breezy and self-assured on the surface, with a competitive edge underneath. Characters named Tracy often navigate questions of ambition and identity in worlds that underestimate them, making the name a good fit for driven protagonists in workplace dramas or sharp-tongued romantic leads.

Best genres for Tracy

Contemporary FictionMysteryRomanceLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Tracy

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


Variations & nicknames

TracyTraceyTraciTracie

Pairs well with

Tracy BowmanTracy CaldwellTracy GarrettTracy HollowayTracy SuttonTracy Prescott

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More Old French names

Eric

Eric is a masculine given name derived from the Old Norse Eiríkr, composed of ei meaning "ever, always" and ríkr meaning "ruler, mighty" — thus "eternal ruler" or "ever powerful". The name was widespread among the Norse and spread through Norman French influence into the medieval Romance-language world. In France the name has been used since the Norman period, though it peaked in popularity in the 20th century.

Guy

Guy is an Old French masculine name derived from the Germanic element widu meaning "wood" or wit meaning "wide". The Normans brought it to England after 1066, where it flourished through medieval romance. In French the name became Gui or Guy, while the Latin form was Wido. It was popularized by legends of Guy of Warwick, a celebrated hero of medieval chansons de geste.

Paige

From the Old French and Medieval English page, meaning a young attendant or servant — particularly a boy in the service of a knight or nobleman, ultimately from the Greek paidion, "small boy," diminutive of pais, "child." The occupational surname transferred first to masculine given-name use and then, from the mid-20th century, predominantly to feminine use in the English-speaking world, where it became particularly popular in the 1970s–1990s.

Merle

From the Old French merle, meaning "blackbird," derived from the Latin merula. As a given name, Merle appeared in the 19th century English-speaking world, used for both men and women, though it has largely been masculine in American usage. The bird association lends it a musical, nature-connected quality, and the name was borne by several country music artists who reinforced its Southern American character.

Myrl

A variant spelling of Merle, from the Old French merle, meaning "blackbird," derived from the Latin merula. Myrl is a simplified American spelling variant, appearing primarily in 19th and early 20th-century Southern and Midwestern naming records, where phonetically rendered names with Y replacing E were common. It has been used for both sexes but was more common as a masculine name in American records.

Fay

From the Old French fae or fee, meaning "fairy" or "enchantress," itself derived from the Latin fata, the Fates. The name carries an aura of otherworldly charm rooted in Arthurian legend — Morgan le Fay being the most celebrated bearer. It has also been used as a diminutive of Faith since the late 19th century, adding a more grounded, devotional strand to its meaning.


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