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2000+ Girl Names That End in Y

  1. Cady
    • Origin:

      English, diminutive and surname
    • Description:

      Cady is one of those names that sounds popular but is actually rare in this form, given to only a few dozen baby girls in the US last year.
  2. Unity
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "oneness"
    • Description:

      Like Verity and Amity, this inclusive virtue name used by the colorful British literary Mitford family is ready to join its more popular peers Hope, Faith, and Grace.
  3. Becky
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Rebecca
    • Description:

      One of those casual down-home names last popular in the 1960s.
  4. Beauty
    • Origin:

      English word name
    • Meaning:

      "attractiveness"
    • Description:

      Better yet, find a name with the same meaning: Belle, Cosima, Indira, Uilani, Zeynep.
  5. Wrigley
    • Origin:

      Surname name
    • Description:

      Wrigley is a fast-rising name for boys and girls right now in the US. You're unlikely to hear it outside of Chicago, though, as most of these parents are huge fans of the Chicago Cubs, who play at Wrigley Field. For a more subtle Cubs-related baby name, try Addison or Clark—two streets that border the ballpark.
  6. Merry
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "lighthearted, happy"
    • Description:

      She'd better be. Merry is one of the classic names for Christmas babies.
  7. Livy
    • Lizzy
      • Shelly
        • Lovejoy
          • Origin:

            English surname
          • Meaning:

            "love joy"
          • Description:

            Lovejoy's use as a surname follows that as a nickname. In Medieval times, when many people shared names, nicknames were relied upon to distinguish individuals. Many of these nicknames later became surnames. Lovejoy, from the Middle English love(n) and joie, referred to someone who was affectionate and joyful — although the Oxford Dictionary of American Family Names notes that Lovejoy may have been bestowed ironically, at times.
        • Pansy
          • Origin:

            English flower name from French
          • Meaning:

            "thought"
          • Description:

            Pansy is an early floral name that lost credibility when it became a derogatory slang term for gay people. Better these days: Posy or Poppy.
        • Mosley
          • Origin:

            English place name and surname
          • Meaning:

            "peat bog, mouse clearing"
          • Description:

            Mosley, former best known as the surname of author Walter, has been put in play as a first name for girls by football great Peyton Manning, who used the name for his twin daughter, sister of Marshall. Alternate spellings are Moseley and Mosely and the first syllable rhymes with Rose.
        • Aeronwy
          • Signy
            • Origin:

              Scandinavian
            • Meaning:

              "new victory"
            • Description:

              Signy — also spelled Signe — would make another distinctively offbeat alternative to Sydney. Signy appears in Norse mythology as the twin sister of Sigmund.
          • Briley
            • Origin:

              Modern invented name or surname, English
            • Meaning:

              "briar meadow, briar clearing"
            • Description:

              Similar to Brielle and Riley, this name lags quite far behind these more common variations. It peaked at Number 622 in 2009 in the US, but it is now descending the ranks. It coincides with the surname Briley, a contracted form of Brierley, which might be an interesting alternative.
          • Gilly
            • Origin:

              Literary name
            • Description:

              Gilly is a name that's popped up from time to time in different contexts: As a nickname for Gillian, for instance, and as the name of a town in Switzerland. But it's increasingly associated with Hannah Murray's character Gilly in HBO's Game of Thrones, whom Sam Tarly rescued from Craster's Keep.
          • Ivey
            • Origin:

              Surname name, variation of Ivy
            • Meaning:

              "son of Ive; person from Ivoy; ivy plant"
            • Description:

              Ivey can be considered an alternate spelling of the botanical name Ivy, but it also has separate origins as a surname. For the Anglo-Saxon Ivey line, Ivey means "son of Ive," while for the English-Norman Iveys, it means "person from Ivoy," a commune in the Cher department of France.
          • Zaley
            • Origin:

              Feminine variation of Zale, invented nickname-name, or short form of Azalea
            • Description:

              All baby names can be made more "creative" by putting a Z at the beginning instead of what's conventionally there: B or C or H, for instance. Zaley is an adorable entry in this group, also spelled Zailey or Zayley or Zalee. The Zaley spelling attains a measure of authenticity when seen as a feminine form of Zale, a Greek name with an ocean-related meaning.
          • Bentley
            • Origin:

              English Surname
            • Meaning:

              "meadow with coarse grass"
            • Description:

              We can't account for the popularity of this name, for either a boy or a girl, given the first syllable, the tacky connotations with a luxury car, and the range of other options which are more harmonious to the ear. Nonetheless, nearly 200 girls were names Bentley in the US in 2015.
          • February
            • Origin:

              Word name or Latin
            • Meaning:

              "purification feast"
            • Description:

              If January, April and August are useable and fashionable, why not February? February as a word derives from the Latin februa, which was the name of a purification feast coming at the end of winter, to prepare for the coming spring.