From Irish Maeve (Máedhbh), a queenly mythic name meaning “intoxicating,” rendered in a modern invented ending.
Maevry is an inventive modern name that takes one of Irish mythology's most powerful figures — Queen Maeve — and braids her into a new compound identity. Maeve (Medb in Old Irish) was the legendary warrior-queen of Connacht, whose name is variously translated as "she who intoxicates" or "the intoxicating one," from a Proto-Celtic root related to mead, the honey wine of feasts and war-bands.
She is one of the most vivid presences in the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology, commanding armies, taking and discarding husbands as she saw fit, and launching the epic cattle-raid Táin Bó Cúailnge for the pure satisfaction of matching her husband's wealth. The -ry ending that transforms Maeve into Maevry follows a naming pattern common to English and Anglo-Irish names — Audrey, Henley, Emery — giving the resulting name a softer, more rhythmic cadence than the crisp single syllable of Maeve alone. This construction is a kind of folk etymology in reverse: rather than simplifying an older name, parents are elaborating it, adding lyrical extension without abandoning the root.
Maevry is rare enough that it remains essentially a blank canvas for individual interpretation, but it carries in its core the full weight of Maeve's mythology: sovereignty, ferocity, and a kind of irresistible magnetism. As Celtic-influenced names enjoy a sustained renaissance in English-speaking countries, Maevry represents a genuinely creative contribution — honoring tradition while composing something new.