Under the Rose Bush

  1. Auric
    • Origin:

      Literary name
    • Description:

      Auric is an Ian Fleming anti-hero, better known as Goldfinger. Better to go with James. Or even Bond.
  2. Aurora
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "dawn"
    • Description:

      The goddess name Aurora has consistently been on the US popularity list since the nineteenth century, but has really taken off in the past 30 years. Aurora also enjoys remarkable international popularity, ranking in the Top 100 throughout the English-speaking world as well as in Italy, Spain, Norway, Switzerland, and several other European and Latin American countries.
  3. Azura
    • Aewith
      • Azul
        • Bain
          • Origin:

            Gaelic or Sindarin
          • Meaning:

            "white, fair"
          • Description:

            Derived from the Scottish Gaelic bàn, meaning "white, fair". It's also a name in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional Elvish language, in which it means "beautiful".
        • Blade
          • Origin:

            Word name
          • Description:

            One of the new crop of boys' names that manage to be unconventional and macho at the same time — though Blade verges on the threatening.
        • Blaine
          • Origin:

            Irish and Scottish
          • Meaning:

            "yellow"
          • Description:

            Attractive Scottish and Irish surname name of a seventh-century saint, associated with the illusionist and escape artist David Blaine.
        • Blaise
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "to lisp, stammer"
          • Description:

            As modern as it sounds, Blaise is an ancient Christian martyr name. In Arthurian legend, Blaise is the name of Merlin the Magician's secretary. Its relation to the word and name Blaze gives it a fiery feel. Amanda Beard named her baby boy Blaise Ray.
        • Brooke
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "small stream"
          • Description:

            Brooke has long projected an aura of sleek sophistication, and can also be seen as a stylish water name.
        • Bryleigh
          • Origin:

            Modern invented name
          • Meaning:

            "thorny woodland clearing"
          • Description:

            Blending the sounds of Bryce, Brian, Riley and Kylie, Bryleigh is a modern invention that ranked in the US Top 1000 from 2010 to 2017, alongside its more popular counterpart, Brylee. Peaking in 2015 when it was given to 320 girls, Bryleigh has since been in decline, pushed out by Brynleigh and Everleigh.
        • Burgundy
          • Origin:

            French place-name; also color name
          • Description:

            Ron Burgundy was Will Ferrell's fictional helmet-haired newsman, but this color name is much more suited to a girl.
        • Blythe
          • Byern
            • Calliope
              • Origin:

                Greek mythology name
              • Meaning:

                "beautiful voice"
              • Description:

                Calliope is the name of the muse of epic poetry -- and also the musical instrument on the merry-go-round. Bold and creative, it would not be the easiest name for a girl lacking such qualities. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2016. While Americans usually pronounce this name with a long I sound and the emphasis on the second syllables, Greeks pronounce it with the emphasis on the third syllable -- ka-lee-OH-pee.
            • Cassidy
              • Origin:

                Irish
              • Meaning:

                "curly-haired"
              • Description:

                Has fallen off its Kathie Lee Gifford inspired peak in the 1990s, but since that notably celebrity baby is now a grownup and out of the limelight, Cassidy may once again reclaim its own Irish charm.
            • Cliff
              • Origin:

                Topographical name or short form of Clifford or Clifton
              • Description:

                Cliff is a familiar, timeless short form -- never too popular, yet widely known -- that you might also think of as a geographical name ala Vale or Field.
            • Clover
              • Origin:

                Flower name, from Old English
              • Meaning:

                "key"
              • Description:

                Clover is a charming, perky choice if you want to move beyond hothouse blooms like Rose and Lily, and it's recently become a new celeb favorite, chosen by both Neal McDonough and Natasha Gregson Wagner, who used it to honor her mother, Natalie Wood, one of whose most iconic films was Inside Daisy Clover.
            • Cobalt
              • Origin:

                Color and nature name
              • Description:

                Even among the range of blue names on the current baby naming palette -- Blue itself, Azure, Cerulean, Teal, Aqua, Cyan, Indigo -- Cobalt remains the most unusual, not to mention the most masculine.
            • Colt
              • Origin:

                Word name
              • Meaning:

                "young horse"
              • Description:

                Colt is the kind of unconventionally macho name that is so trendy right now, because of or in spite of its association with horses and guns.