Gram is a Norse heroic name associated with strength and also the legendary sword in Old Norse tradition.
Gram carries two distinct but equally compelling etymological threads. As a Norse name, Gram is the legendary sword of the hero Sigurd (Siegfried) in the *Völsunga Saga* and the *Eddic* poems — the blade forged by the dwarf smith Regin, shattered and reforged, capable of splitting an anvil and slaying the dragon Fáfnir. In this tradition, Gram (from Old Norse *gramr*, meaning wrath or fierce one) is the name of the most celebrated weapon in the Northern mythological canon, making it a name charged with heroic and destructive power.
Separately, Gram functions as a Scottish and English diminutive of Graham, a surname and given name derived from a Scottish estate name ultimately rooted in the Old English *grǣg hām*, meaning grey home or gravelly homestead. Graham has produced notable bearers including Alexander Graham Bell and the novelist Graham Greene, giving the short form Gram a literary and intellectual pedigree through association. In contemporary naming, Gram has emerged as a quietly stylish choice — monosyllabic, strong, and unusual without being invented.
It fits comfortably alongside modern short names like Reid, Beckett, and Colt. Parents drawn to Norse mythology or Scottish heritage often find Gram a satisfying convergence of ancestry and modernity. There is also an accidental irony in the digital age: the Instagram-shortened *gram* as cultural slang gives the ancient name an inadvertently contemporary resonance.