French-origin name meaning 'of the sea,' derived from 'la mer.' Used as a modern given name.
Lemar is a name with dual and overlapping etymological streams, both of which carry a sense of wide, open space. The most common origin traces it to Lamar, a French topographic surname meaning "of the pool" or "of the marsh" — from the French la mare — which was carried to Louisiana and the American South by French Creole settlers and later spread as both surname and given name across the African-American community particularly. A secondary reading connects it to la mer, French for "the sea," lending the name a more expansive, oceanic quality.
In either case, the name suggests water — still or vast, intimate or boundless. As a given name, Lemar became particularly prominent in twentieth-century African-American naming culture, where French-derived names and place-name surnames were embraced and adapted with creative freedom. The name carries the same dignified sound architecture as Lamar — two syllables, stress on the second, ending in a resonant open vowel — but the -e- spelling gives it a subtly different visual personality, slightly more intimate and less geographic.
Notable bearers include Lemar Obika, the British R&B singer who rose to prominence in the early 2000s on Pop Idol and released the hit "Dance (With U)," bringing the name to a wide European audience. Lemar strikes a balance between the musical and the substantial — it sounds like it belongs both in a recording studio and in a courtroom, a boardroom and on a sports field. In an era when parents are revisiting mid-century African-American names with renewed appreciation, Lemar offers elegance without self-consciousness: a name that has always known what it was.