313 Girl Names That End in een, ene, or ine

  1. Angeline
    • Origin:

      French variation of Angela
    • Meaning:

      "angel"
    • Description:

      With Angelina becoming so popular thanks to Ms. Jolie, this could be a new twist—but everyone will always misunderstand it as Angelina. While it currently ranks at Number 951 in the US, it's Number 352 in France.
  2. Ludivine
    • Origin:

      French
    • Meaning:

      "friend of the people"
    • Description:

      This rare French name was made a little more familar via French soccer player Ludivine Diguelman, golfer Ludivine Krautz and actress Ludivine Sagnier.
  3. Sunshine
    • Origin:

      Word name
    • Description:

      Sunshine was seen as a quintessential hippie name of the 70s, reaching as high as Number 536 in 1975. Now such names are making a bit of a retro comeback, seen, for example, as a character on Glee.
  4. Everdeen
    • Origin:

      Fictional name
    • Description:

      With "Eve" and "Ever" names trending in a big way, The Hunger Games heroine Katniss Everdeen’s surname definitely has first-name potential for adventurous parents. It was chosen as a nod to Bathsheba Everdene, the central character of Thomas Hardy’s Far From the Madding Crowd; according to the author Suzanne Collins: "The two are very different, but both struggle with knowing their hearts".
  5. Eline
    • Reine
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "queen"
      • Description:

        This regal French name is a descendant of the Latin Regina, as is the Spanish Reina. Reine is also a male name in Scandinavia.
    • Carmine
      • Aline
        • Origin:

          Variation of Adeline or Aileen
        • Description:

          Aline may have originated as a short form of Adeline in the Middle Ages, but it may also be a variation of the Irish Aileen or Scottish Eileen. Aline dropped off the Top 1000 in the 1950s. Fewer than 40 baby girls were named Aline in the US last year.
      • Eglantine
        • Origin:

          French botanical name
        • Description:

          This name for the sweetbriar shrub is a bit too reminiscent of eggplant.
      • Perrine
        • Origin:

          Feminine variation of Perry or Peter
        • Description:

          Five girls were given the name Perrine last year. More modern-sounding are Perrin, Perry, or even Petra.
      • Faustine
        • Origin:

          Latin, feminine variation of Faust
        • Meaning:

          "fortunate one"
        • Description:

          Faustine has a positive meaning, although the association with the character who sold his soul to the devil may be off-putting. This name is among the Top 100 girls' names in France, but was given to fewer than five baby girls in the US last year.
      • Katharine
        • Origin:

          Spelling variation of Katherine, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "pure"
        • Description:

          This is the spelling that old-time film star Katharine Hepburn used, and it's still favored by fans wanting to reference her classic strength and beauty. But in general, it's losing ground to Katherine and even Ms. Hepburn's own favorite short form, Kate.
      • Noreen
        • Origin:

          English, diminutive of Nora
        • Description:

          Noreen's in limbo, especially now that Nora has made a comeback.
      • Ilene
        • Origin:

          Greek variation of Helen
        • Description:

          Ilene might be a phonetic way to spell Aileen or Eileen, though in the end people may have more luck pronouncing the original.
      • Feline
        • Origin:

          Feminine form of Felinus, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "cat-like"
        • Description:

          This Top 100 girls' name in The Netherlands is unlikely to translate to the U.S., where it would undoubtedly pronounced fee-line and mistaken for the adjective that means cat-like. While the name Feline -- and Felina and Felinus -- do have the same root, the considerably more charming pronunciation in modern-day Europe is fee-LEEN-ah. Some websites mistakenly relate it to Felix and give its meaning as happy or fortunate.
      • Alexandrine
        • Origin:

          French and German variation of Alexandra
        • Meaning:

          "defending men"
        • Description:

          Alexandra is a name with many international variations, elaborations and short forms, and Alexandrine is one of the more unusual. Another, Alexandrina, was the first name of Queen Victoria.
      • Lupine
        • Origin:

          Flower name from Latin
        • Meaning:

          "pertaining to the wolf"
        • Description:

          Lupine (spelled Lupin outside of North America) is a flower related to sweetpeas. It was given its wolfish meaning because the plant was said to deplete the soil. Comedian Jenny Slate used it as a middle name for her daughter Ida in 2020.
      • Emmaline
        • Origin:

          Spelling variation of Emmeline
        • Description:

          This iteration of the name makes the link to the ultra-popular Emma even more obvious. It lags behind alternate spelling Emmeline on the US Top 1000 list.
      • Augustine
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "great, magnificent"
        • Description:

          The feminine form of German and French name Augustin, ultimately derived from Latin Augustus. Names with the -ine ending are considered chic in France at the moment; Augustine re-entered the French top 500 in 2009 and is climbing fast.
      • Sixtine
        • Origin:

          French feminine variation of Sixtus
        • Meaning:

          "sixth-born"
        • Description:

          While Sixtine is a name with ancient roots that's popular in modern-day France, it's hard to imagine it gaining hold in English-speaking lands, given its similarity to the number sixteen and its even-more-problematic similarity to the word "sexting." You wouldn't do that to your daughter.