Taken from the English word rumor, making it a rare modern word name with literary and celebrity-style appeal.
Rumor arrives in the naming lexicon as a word-name with surprising classical depth. The English word descends directly from Latin *rumor*, meaning a noise, a murmur, or a common report — and in Roman culture it was personified as a goddess of gossip and fame, closely identified with the Greek deity Pheme. Virgil memorably depicted Rumor in the *Aeneid* as a monstrous, winged creature covered in eyes and tongues, spreading word of Dido and Aeneas's union across North Africa.
Shakespeare later immortalized her in *Henry IV, Part 2*, where Rumor delivers the prologue, "painted full of tongues." The word carried a neutral-to-positive meaning in classical Latin — a report, a reputation — before accumulating its modern connotation of unverified whisper. This etymological arc, from civic report to uncertain hearsay, mirrors the name's own cultural trajectory as a daring modern choice.
As a given name, Rumor is genuinely rare, belonging to a category of bold English-word names — alongside Story, Poet, and True — that parents choose specifically for their unexpected resonance. It rose slightly in cultural visibility in the mid-2000s when celebrities began choosing distinctive word names for their children. For a child named Rumor, the name carries a built-in mythology: ancient, winged, and impossible to silence.