Variant of Harris, meaning 'son of Harry', or from Greek 'Aris' a short form of Aristos meaning 'best'.
Arris carries the dual identity of a name that exists at the intersection of tradition and reinvention. Most closely, it resonates as a variant of Aris — itself a short form of Greek names beginning with *Aristo-*, meaning best or excellent, as in Aristides, Aristotle, and Aristophanes. The Greek *aristos* was the foundational concept behind the word aristocracy, and names built on it carried a classical aspiration toward excellence that made them durable across millennia.
In Greece and Cyprus, Aris remains a living, common given name, warm and familiar rather than archaic. There is also an architectural dimension worth noting: in building terminology, an *arris* is the sharp edge formed where two surfaces meet at an angle — a precise, structural term used in stonecutting, carpentry, and brickwork since at least the seventeenth century, possibly from the Old French *areste* (fishbone, ridge). Whether or not this influenced the name's use, it gives Arris an interesting secondary association: precision, definition, the place where two things meet and form something new.
As a given name, Arris is genuinely rare, appearing in small pockets across the American South and Caribbean communities, often as a family surname brought into given-name use — a common and honorable naming practice. Its rarity is itself a kind of distinction. The name sounds immediately recognizable (landing near Harris, Paris, and Aris) without being predictable. For parents navigating between the familiar and the original, Arris offers a name that feels discovered rather than invented — as if it had always been there, waiting to be used.