No. Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. They can be (and many time are) registered as trademarks however.
In the novel, the protagonist's potential romantic partners include characters like Name 1, Name 2, and Name 3.
anupama
Amari
I believe you are referring to the protagonist.
Holden Caulfield is the name of the protagonist in the novel, Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger.
Author's Last Name. First Name. Title. Publishing Location: Publisher, Copyright Date.
There are a number of works by that name. The novel by Eleanor H. Porter is from 1913.
Not without explicit permission of the copyright holder. The name 'James Bond' is "owned."
The name given to a chief character in a play or novel is the protagonist. This character is usually at the center of the story's events and is often involved in the central conflict.
Short phrases such as names and book titles cannot be protected by copyright. They can be protected by trademark, but this is rare (Harry Potter, for example, is a registered trademark).
The 1960 John Updike novel is called "Rabbit, Run." It is the first novel in Updike's Rabbit series, chronicling the life of the protagonist Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom.
Scout is the nickname of Jean Louise Finch, the protagonist of Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird."