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prince

from the Latin, meaning "first in rank". Prince is a single-syllable name of Latin origin, meaning "first in rank". It ends with an open E sound, which shapes how middle names connect to it phonetically.
latin ✿ 1 syllable a boy's name
P
6 letters
Prince, latin
20
curated middles
1
syllable
Latin
origin
high
popularity
— the heart of it —

six middles for prince

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№ 01
Prince Ambrose
Prince carries the meaning "first in rank" while Ambrose brings "immortal". Said together, Prince Ambrose has both weight and warmth. Prince is 1 syllable. Ambrose at 2 adds length and rhythm.
№ 02
Prince Dorian
"first in rank" (Prince) meets "gift" (Dorian). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The hard D in Dorian gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.
№ 03
Prince Edmund
Prince ("first in rank") with Edmund ("fortunate protector"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. Both names share the letter E. It links them without clashing.
№ 04
Prince Bennett
"first in rank" (Prince) meets "blessed" (Bennett). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The hard B in Bennett gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.
№ 05
Prince Graham
Prince means "first in rank". Graham means "gravelly homestead". The pairing gives the name a layered quality: first in rank on one side, gravelly homestead on the other. Prince is 1 syllable. Graham at 2 adds length and rhythm.
№ 06
Prince Griffin
Prince ("first in rank") with Griffin ("strong lord"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. The hard G in Griffin gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.
— the rest, by mood —

more middles for prince

Flowing and rhythmic

Two to three syllables. Creates a musical cadence.

Prince Ambrose

Prince carries the meaning "first in rank" while Ambrose brings "immortal". Said together, Prince Ambrose has both weight and warmth. Prince is 1 syllable. Ambrose at 2 adds length and rhythm.

Prince Dorian

"first in rank" (Prince) meets "gift" (Dorian). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The hard D in Dorian gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Edmund

Prince ("first in rank") with Edmund ("fortunate protector"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. Both names share the letter E. It links them without clashing.

Prince Bennett

"first in rank" (Prince) meets "blessed" (Bennett). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The hard B in Bennett gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Graham

Prince means "first in rank". Graham means "gravelly homestead". The pairing gives the name a layered quality: first in rank on one side, gravelly homestead on the other. Prince is 1 syllable. Graham at 2 adds length and rhythm.

Prince Griffin

Prince ("first in rank") with Griffin ("strong lord"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. The hard G in Griffin gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Beckett

Prince ("first in rank") and Beckett ("bee cottage"). Two distinct meanings that create a name with range. The longer Beckett (2 syllables) builds on the shorter Prince, giving the name forward momentum.

Prince David

Prince means "first in rank". David means "beloved". The pairing gives the name a layered quality: first in rank on one side, beloved on the other. The hard D in David gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Thomas

"first in rank" (Prince) meets "twin" (Thomas). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The longer Thomas (2 syllables) builds on the shorter Prince, giving the name forward momentum.

Prince Charles

Put "first in rank" next to "free man" and you get a name that feels considered. Prince Charles works on paper and out loud. The hard C in Charles gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Callum

Prince carries the meaning "first in rank" while Callum brings "dove". Said together, Prince Callum has both weight and warmth. Prince is 1 syllable. Callum at 2 adds length and rhythm.

Bold contrast

Longer names that create dramatic rhythm.

Prince Alexander

Prince ("first in rank") with Alexander ("defender of the people"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. Prince is 1 syllable. Alexander at 4 adds length and rhythm.

Prince Bartholomew

Prince carries the meaning "first in rank" while Bartholomew brings "son of the furrow". Said together, Prince Bartholomew has both weight and warmth. The hard B in Bartholomew gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Benedict

Prince ("first in rank") with Benedict ("blessed"). Together the name has two layers: the first name brings one quality, the middle name another. The longer Benedict (3 syllables) builds on the shorter Prince, giving the name forward momentum.

Prince Cornelius

Prince translates to "first in rank". Cornelius to "horn". Together they create a full-name meaning with real texture. The hard C in Cornelius gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Ferdinand

Put "first in rank" next to "bold voyager" and you get a name that feels considered. Prince Ferdinand works on paper and out loud. Prince is 1 syllable. Ferdinand at 3 adds length and rhythm.

Prince Gregory

"first in rank" (Prince) meets "watchful" (Gregory). The combination reads as complete. Neither name overshadows the other. The longer Gregory (3 syllables) builds on the shorter Prince, giving the name forward momentum.

Prince Horatio

Meaning: Prince = "first in rank", Horatio = "timekeeper". One name grounds the other, and the two meanings work as a pair rather than competing. The longer Horatio (3 syllables) builds on the shorter Prince, giving the name forward momentum.

Prince Christopher

Prince means "first in rank". Christopher means "bearer of Christ". The pairing gives the name a layered quality: first in rank on one side, bearer of Christ on the other. The hard C in Christopher gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

Prince Benjamin

The meaning of Prince is "first in rank"; Benjamin is "son of the right hand". There is a natural balance between the two. The hard B in Benjamin gives a clean break after Prince's open vowel ending.

— a kind warning —

combinations to think twice about

Prince Patrick

Prince Patrick. Repeated P- opening creates a tongue-twister effect

Prince Ambrose
say it out loud. first, middle, last. you'll know.
— how it sounds —

the music of prince

Prince ends with an open E sound. That ending shapes which middles transition smoothly and which ones stumble. Names that open with a firm consonant (like G, K, or R) create the cleanest break.

— the full list —

all 20 middles for prince

Prince Alexander
Prince Ambrose
Prince Bartholomew
Prince Benedict
Prince Cornelius
Prince Dorian
Prince Edmund
Prince Ferdinand
Prince Gregory
Prince Horatio
Prince Bennett
Prince Graham
Prince Griffin
Prince Beckett
Prince Christopher
Prince David
Prince Thomas
Prince Charles
Prince Callum
Prince Benjamin
— shortened, softly —

nicknames for prince

Pri
— if there's another —

sibling names for prince

SemJohnJuliusPhilipFrederick