George descends from the Greek Georgios, 'farmer' or 'earth-worker', from 'ge' (earth) and 'ergon' (work), a humble, grounded meaning for a name that became thoroughly royal. Its patron is Saint George, the dragon-slaying martyr who is patron of England and a dozen other nations. Six British kings have borne it, and it has anchored the English-speaking world for centuries with an air of steady, unpretentious reliability.
George feels both stately and cosy: it can crown a monarch or belong to the funniest, most loyal friend at the pub. That double life, Curious George's mischief alongside George Washington's gravitas, is exactly its charm. After dipping mid-century, it has enjoyed a warm revival, prized now as a vintage gentleman's name that sounds honest, good-humoured and completely without pretension.
A George is, quite simply, everyone's favourite person. The standout numbers in his profile tell the whole story: loyalty almost off the chart, humour close behind, and, refreshingly, very little ambition or hunger for attention. Here is someone who doesn't need to win, doesn't need the spotlight, and would genuinely rather make you laugh than impress you. The name means 'earth-worker', and that's the vibe exactly: grounded, down-to-earth, completely without pretension, even though it has crowned six kings and a dragon-slaying saint.
That contrast is the charm of a George. He could be regal, the name carries centuries of royalty, but he wears it like an old jumper. He's the 'quiet Beatle' of any friend group: warm, witty, self-deprecating, the loyal mate who'd drop everything for you and then crack a joke about it. His stability is high and his ego is low, a combination that makes him enormously easy to love and impossible to resent. People trust a George instinctively because he clearly isn't playing an angle.
He's got a playful streak, a dash more imagination than you'd expect, a Curious George curiosity, but it comes without drama, because he doesn't need an audience for it. His diplomacy is real: he keeps the peace not by strategy but by sheer good nature. Ambition-wise he's content, and that contentment is a kind of quiet wisdom in a world of strivers. Generationally, George is a vintage gentleman's name enjoying a warm comeback, and it fits him, a bit old-fashioned in the best sense, honest and unhurried. The George formula is unbeatable: fiercely loyal, effortlessly funny, gloriously unbothered about status. The friend for life.
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George does not flirt; he cultivates. His romance is an act of patient tilling, where love is not a fleeting spark but a harvest earned through sweat, sun, and seasons. He is drawn to the grounded, the resilient—souls with dirt under their nails and depth in their roots. He finds beauty in the mundane, finding eroticism in the shared silence of a morning coffee, the quiet intimacy of building something lasting together. To George, seduction is a slow burn, a steady rhythm that mirrors the turning of the earth. He is not interested in fleeting passions or superficial games. He seeks a partner who understands that true connection requires work, patience, and a willingness to weather storms side by side. His touch is firm, reliable, and deeply sensual, grounding you when the world feels chaotic. He is repelled by flightiness and vanity, those who refuse to get their hands dirty. For George, love is not a destination but a daily practice of nurturing, a sacred duty to the soil of the heart. He offers loyalty that runs deep, like roots seeking water in the dry earth.
It comes from Greek and means 'farmer' or 'earth-worker'.
An early-4th-century Roman soldier and martyr, famous in legend for slaying a dragon, and patron saint of England.
April 23.
Very much so, six British kings have been named George.
Georgie and, in the north of Britain, Geordie.
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