London Tube Names

  1. Cyprus
    • Origin:

      Latin from Greek
    • Meaning:

      "cypress tree; copper"
    • Description:

      This Mediterranean island name would be a plausible choice for parents with a Greek or Turkish heritage.
  2. Chancery
    • Charing
      • Clapton
        • Croxley
          • Devon
            • Origin:

              English place-name
            • Description:

              This spelling of Devon, as opposed to Devin or Devan, makes it a pretty and popular British place-name, evoking the beautiful county of farmlands and dramatic seascapes and moors in southwest England. A stylish ambi-gender name particularly well used in the early nineties, Devon remains an attractive option--though be aware that at this point in time, it is used more frequently for boys.
          • Dalston
            • Drayton
              • Earl
                • Origin:

                  English aristocratic title
                • Description:

                  Earl is a title name - brought to England by the vikings - that's out of fashion right now, unlike King and Duke. Its peak popularity was in the 1920s, which gives it a dusty great-grandpa feel, but there are also younger Earls in pop culture, like the reformed criminal in "My Name is Earl".
              • Eden
                • Origin:

                  Hebrew
                • Meaning:

                  "place of pleasure, delight"
                • Description:

                  Eden is an attractive, serene name with obvious intimations of Paradise, one of several place names drawn from the Bible by the Puritans in the seventeenth century.
              • Elm
                • Origin:

                  Nature name
                • Description:

                  For tree huggers.
              • Elmer
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "noble and renowned"
                • Description:

                  Thanks to Elmer Fudd, Elmer the Cow, and even Elmer's glue, this name has become a bit of a joke -- the quintessential so-far-out-it-will-always-be-out name. But with its trendy El-beginning and popular er-ending, who knows?
              • Emerson
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "son of Emery"
                • Description:

                  The combination of Emily and Emma's popularity -- and the fact that Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher's daughter is named Emerson -- have put this formerly strictly boys’ name, embodying the gravitas of Ralph Waldo Emerson, in the limelight for girls.
              • Euston
                • Origin:

                  Irish
                • Meaning:

                  "heart"
                • Description:

                  Euston is best known as a London railway station, which got its name from a stately home and village in the English county of Suffolk. Ultimately it is thought to mean "settlement of a person called Efe". Unlike its Top 1000 soundalike Houston (as in Texas), Euston has never been recording on the charts.
              • Eltham
                • Erith
                  • Forest
                    • Origin:

                      French occupational name
                    • Meaning:

                      "woodsman or woods"
                    • Description:

                      The Forest variation of Forrest, used by actor Whitaker, nudges the meaning more toward the woods and away from the woodsman.
                  • Finchley
                    • George
                      • Origin:

                        Greek
                      • Meaning:

                        "farmer"
                      • Description:

                        Iconoclasts though we may be, we like Fred, we like Frank, and we like George, which was among the Top 10 from 1830 to 1950, when the number of little Georges started to decline. Solid, strong, royal and saintly, yet friendly and unpretentious, we think that George is in prime position for a comeback, especially since it was chosen by Britain's royal couple.
                    • Gordon
                      • Origin:

                        Scottish
                      • Meaning:

                        "great hill"
                      • Description:

                        As this long-term Age of Jordans, both male and female, begins to wind down, the neglected Scottish favorite Gordon, with its more distinguished history, could come back as a distinctive alternative. Gordon is one of the most classic authentically Scottish names for boys.