An English virtue name meaning 'courageous' or 'daring,' used as a bold, modern given name.
Brave is a virtue name in the purest sense — a word so freighted with human aspiration that bestowing it on a child becomes an act of hope and exhortation. The word entered English from the Old French *brave*, meaning "courageous" or "splendid," which itself drew from the Italian *bravo* and possibly from the Latin *barbarus*, meaning "wild" or "foreign" — a reminder that what one culture called barbaric, another recognized as fierce and free. Courage, in every culture's mythology, is the first virtue: the one that makes all others possible.
The name gained its most visible modern cultural moment with Disney-Pixar's 2012 animated film *Brave*, featuring Merida — a red-haired Scottish archer whose refusal of convention and insistence on self-determination made her one of animation's most distinctive heroines. Though Merida herself was not named Brave, the title's association with her story — one of autonomy, mother-daughter complexity, and genuine physical courage — lodged the word firmly in the emotional vocabulary of a generation of parents and children. As a given name, Brave belongs to a growing tradition of word-names that include True, Free, Wilder, and Honor.
These names reject the ornamental in favor of the declarative: they say something about who their bearer is meant to be. Brave in particular carries an urgency — it is not merely a wish for safety or happiness, but a charge toward something harder and more luminous. It is, implicitly, a parent saying: the world will ask difficult things of you, and I believe you are equal to them.