Personal favorite girl names

  1. Jovie
    • Origin:

      Modern invented
    • Meaning:

      "jovial"
    • Description:

      Jovie has a lively and cheerful sound and makes a fresh twist on old (and new) favorites like Jody, Josie, and Jolie. It could be considered a short form of Jovita, Jovena, and Jovana - all feminine forms of Jove, the Roman king of gods - but it could equally work as a stand alone name.
  2. Juneau
    • Origin:

      Place-name
    • Description:

      Juneau, the name of the city in Alaska, has rightfully taken a back seat as a name to the classic Juno. Most famous reference: When the pregnant teenager is introduced in the movie "Juno," the prospective adoptive father says, "Oh, like the city in Alaska." Juno takes a deep breath and then says simply, "No."
  3. Junie
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of June
    • Description:

      A cute nickname, but June is a much better bet for the birth certificate.
  4. Juniper
    • Origin:

      Latin tree name
    • Meaning:

      "young"
    • Description:

      Juniper is a fresh-feeling nature name -- it's a small evergreen shrub -- with lots of energy. A new favorite of fashionable parents, Juniper joins such other tree and shrub names as Hazel, Acacia, and Willow.
  5. Jellica
    • Jordenne
      • Keely
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "slender"
        • Description:

          Keely is well-used in modern Ireland, also found as Keeley and Keela. The boys' form is Keelan. Largely unknown in the US, this could make an interesting update for Kelly or Kaylie or Kylie -- though it might ultimately prove to close to one of those trendy names.
      • Keira
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "little dark one"
        • Description:

          Keira is an attractive girls’ name that's gotten a huge boost from the meteoric rise of Keira Knightley. Original spelling Kiera, which relates more directly to the male Kieran, was the more popular form until the rise of Keira Knightley reversed the order. Both are Anglicized versions of the Irish Ciara.
      • Keesie
        • Kredence
          • Lacey
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "from Lassy"
            • Description:

              A unique combination of a surname feel and dainty femininity. It's currently associated with actress Lacey Chambert.
          • Laken
            • Origin:

              Variation of Lake, English
            • Meaning:

              "lake"
            • Description:

              Not quite a nature name and not quite a surname — whatever Laken is or isn't, we know it's definitely a name to watch.
          • Larue
            • Lavender
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "purple flower"
              • Description:

                Lavender lags far behind sweet-smelling purple-hued sister names Violet and Lila, but is starting to get some enthusiastic attention from cutting-edge namers along with other adventurous nature names like Clementine and Marigold.
            • Leora
              • Origin:

                Diminutive of Eleanor, or Hebrew and Greek
              • Meaning:

                "light"
              • Description:

                Somewhat dated Hebrew name that appears more modern when spelled Liora.
            • Libby
              • Origin:

                English, diminutive of Elizabeth
              • Meaning:

                "pledged to God"
              • Description:

                Through all the years when Betty, Betsy, Beth, Liz, and Lizzie were the Elizabethan nicknames of choice, the bubblier Libby was set aside, but today it may be the most modern of all—it has already made a strong comeback in England and Wales, where it ranks Number 139.
            • Lilith
              • Origin:

                Assyrian, Sumerian
              • Meaning:

                "ghost, night monster"
              • Description:

                Lilith is derived from the Akkadian word lilitu meaning "of the night." In Jewish folklore she is portrayed as Adam's rejected first wife, who was turned into a night demon for refusing to obey him. Lilith is unrelated to most other Lil- names, with the exception of Lilita, which is the Latvian variation.
            • Lillia
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "lilies"
              • Description:

                More than Lily yet less than Lillian, Lillia is a fresh and undeniably pretty member of the stylish genus of double (or in this case triple) l names. You can also spell it Lilia.
            • Lilou
              • Origin:

                Occitan pet form of French Liliane
              • Meaning:

                "lily"
              • Description:

                Lilou is a charming, rarely heard import. Occitan is a language spoken in Provence, in the south of France, in which the suffix "ou" denotes a pet form — thus, Lilou as a short form of Liliane or its Occitan form Liliana or Liliano. Its popularity in France--where it's currently Number 12--can be traced to the 1997 film The Fifth Element.
            • Linnet
              • Origin:

                French
              • Meaning:

                "flaxen haired"
              • Description:

                Although the accent in Linnet is on the first syllable, it could be confused with the dated Lynette.