I have friends who named their son Tiberius, and other friends who named their son Hieronymus. these boys are in elementary school.
Women - China, Henrietta, Lila Jean, Blanche, Verna, Ruby
Men - Skeet, Hubert, Elwyn, Luther, Claude
Looking into one branch of my family tree, I see Thankful, Mindwell, Relief, and Mercy. Hot names of the American colonies in their day.
Mordechai, Zadok, Ori, Ephraim, and Zipporah are all Jewish names that I hear pretty frequently among people of varying ages. Mordechai and Zipporah are prominent characters in different stories in the bible, while Ephraim is one of the sons of Joseph, and another name for the Kingdom of Israel. Zadok is a transliteration of the word for righteous, and “Or” means, by connotation, enlightened-- Ori is a nickname.
I even know a married couple who are Mordechai and Zipporah.
“Zadok” is the same word, or the same root, anyway, as the last name “Sedaka.”
I work in a preschool, and I’m seeing all sorts on “Old person” names on toddlers. we have Louises, Stellas, Henrys, Tesses-- the “Medieval occupation” thing seems to have passed. My ten-year-old goes to school with the Hunters and Conners and Chandlers. Now it’s retirement home names.
The new Poldark series is really popular on US TV right now. I’m fully expecting to see a Verity soon, and then maybe a few more Revolutionary War era names.
My niece just named her son Emmett.
Lego movie fan?
Maybe. They have an older son who might be into Lego.
Elmer is about dead as a name, thanks to Warner Bros.
The closest to unusual names in my family would be an aunt named Stanislava, but she went by Stella. She was my dad’s sister and the only one of the 4 sibs who was born in Poland. Apparently, my grandmother went back to visit after emigrating and my aunt was born there.
BUT, the man we bought our house from was named Swepson. His dad’s first name was also Swepson. Yeah, I googled him, just out of curiosity one day. He and his wife have both died, but they were in their 80s when they sold us this house 12 years ago, which has nothing at all to do with this thread. Is that over sharing??
Not entirely - my next door neighbor when I was a kid was named Elmer, and I think his son was named for him also, but he went by his middle name.
My nephew has named his kids Louis, Elliot, Nathan, and Theodore.
My mother’s family had two men named Green, one as a first name and one as a middle name (his first name was Memory). There was a girl named Paralee in there somewhere.
We had a Parilee in the preschool. Elliot is a very popular name for little boys now, It sounds funny to me, because when I was a kid, “Elliot” was the sort of name you gave to a fictional geek, along with Percy, or Eugene, and no one would dream of giving to a real person.
I had my son late, and he is 10; I will be 50 in about 7 weeks. Even though I have a fairly young child, I am really out of the naming cohort, and am technically old enough to be a grandmother. What I feel about names no longer counts, if that makes sense. Elliot I guess was out of play for so long that it lost its “geeky” taint. I’m not sure what brought it back into play, unless it was the Untouchables movie in 1993-- people who saw it in high school had no other association with the name. Or maybe it was Elliot Stabler on L&O: SVU, which premiered in 1999. He definitely was not geeky.
Elliot started exploding once kids who loved E.T. started having kids
Zephery (maternal grandma)
Herbert
Mahershalalhashbaz (tho I just saw this name on some show’s credits) [my fave Bible name, thanks, Isaiah!]
Dorian
Eliza
Ulysses
Innocent (I know a 70 yr old man with this name)
Honesty (I know a 30 yr old girl with this name)
Sky (yep… I know a 40 yr old man with this name - hippie parents)
I have an ancestor (female) named Wallaburg, sometimes written Walburga.
I have a cousin Dismas. I don’t think I’ve ever met another Dismas, despite the Biblical-ish origins.
Those are the only two names that spring to mind for me. Lots of boring ones in my family. 
One Grandfather’s name was Marion.
My maternal grandfather had a sister named Lavina and my maternal grandmother had a sister named Lavinia. German names are weird sometimes
My Mother’s first name was Carrie but she went by her middle name which was Leola. I have never known another Leola. My Dad’s name was Oscar. Both very old names.
My mother’s father was named Elsie (I would not be surprised to find it’s a spelled-out acronym–L. Z.). His first son–the oldest child–they named Elsie, but with a different middle initial
, so he did not get “Jr.” appended to his name. However, a later son is first-named, “Junior,” (I don’t remember his middle initial), but Elsie is nowhere in his name. Neither is “Jr.”.
Confused? You won’t be after this episode of “Soap.”
In my family tree, there are names like Adelhaide, Margaretha, Agnieska, Homer, Curtiss,Dorris (male), Stanislaus, Azenath (called Zenie) and a whole passel of girls with their dad’s name both femnized and dimunized (Johnnie Mae, Billie Faye, Bobbie Sue, Willie).
When I was in college, I had a job in a nursing home. We had a folks named Pauline, Iola, Hattie, Irene and Mildred. The men tended to have more timeless names.