From Old French 'rogue' meaning 'arrogant' or English 'rogue' meaning 'wanderer, rebel.'
Rogue derives from the sixteenth-century English word meaning a vagrant or wanderer, itself borrowed from the Latin "rogare" (to beg or ask), originally describing those who traveled without license or lord. For centuries it carried a distinctly roguish connotation — cunning, ungovernable, operating outside polite society's rules. That edge is precisely what gave the word its dark glamour, and eventually made it usable as a name for the boldly nonconformist child.
The name rocketed into popular consciousness through Marvel Comics' X-Men, where Rogue — real name Anna Marie — debuted in 1981 as a mutant who absorbs the memories and powers of anyone she touches. She is one of comics' most psychologically complex heroines: isolated by her own gift, yearning for connection, and fiercely independent despite (or because of) her curse. Actress Anna Paquin's portrayal in the 2000 film franchise introduced Rogue to a generation that had never picked up a comic book.
As a given name, Rogue sits firmly in the tradition of word names that parents choose precisely because they announce something — defiance, originality, a refusal to be categorized. It has appeared with increasing frequency since the early 2000s, more commonly given to girls in English-speaking countries, where its association with the X-Men heroine skews it feminine. It remains genuinely rare, which is part of its appeal: a child named Rogue arrives with a story already attached, one about surviving on one's own terms.