Noir is the French word for black, giving the name a sleek, dramatic meaning tied to color.
Noir is the French word for "black," a word that arrived in English not merely as a color term but as an entire aesthetic sensibility when American film critics in 1946 — borrowing the French phrase "film noir" — named the shadowy, morally ambiguous crime films that Hollywood had been producing throughout the 1940s. The genre, itself influenced by German Expressionism and the hard-boiled fiction of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, transformed "noir" into a cultural shorthand for rain-slicked streets, femmes fatales, unreliable narrators, and the darkness lurking beneath civilized surfaces. As a given name, it carries all of that cinematic weight effortlessly.
Beyond film, "noir" has permeated literature (Nordic noir, neo-noir), fashion (the eternal chicness of monochrome), and wine culture (Pinot Noir, the great grape of Burgundy, its name evoking the deep blue-black of the berry cluster). In French-speaking cultures, Noir has occasionally been used as a surname and very rarely as a given name, but its migration into Anglophone baby naming is a thoroughly contemporary phenomenon — part of the broader trend of color words and aesthetic terms (Indigo, Sage, Ivory, Azure) becoming first names. As a name, Noir is striking, unapologetically dramatic, and deeply confident.
It announces an aesthetic rather than an etymology. A child named Noir grows into a name that references an entire tradition of art, film, and literary mood — a name that is less a word than a whole atmosphere.