Might Use One Day

  1. Ford
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "dweller at the ford"
    • Description:

      The long association to the Ford Motor Company doesn't stand in the way of this being a strong, independent, single-syllable name.
  2. Foster
    • Origin:

      English occupational name
    • Meaning:

      "forester"
    • Description:

      Foster is one commonly heard last name that makes a fine first. The word foster means "to nourish" — as in "fostering hope", or "fostering a relationship". The only problem with Foster might be its association with "foster child."
  3. Fox
    • Origin:

      Animal name
    • Description:

      Fox is one animal name backed by a longish tradition, and then popularized via the lead character Fox Mulder on X Files. Fox is simple, sleek, and a little bit wild, and could make an interesting middle name.
  4. Fraser
    • Origin:

      Scottish from French
    • Meaning:

      "strawberry"
    • Description:

      Though TV's "Frasier" made the name famous, and Frazier is a well-used variation, Fraser is the original, used mostly in Scotland.
  5. Farley
    • Gaia
      • Origin:

        Greek and Latin
      • Meaning:

        "earth mother; rejoicing"
      • Description:

        Floral, bright, and subtly powerful, Gaia is a name with two separate origins. In Greek mythology, it is the name of the earth goddess and the universal mother, who takes her epithet from the Ancient Greek word for land or ground. It was this ecological element that led actress Emma Thompson to choose it for her daughter back in 1999, and it could hold similar appeal to green minded parents today.
    • Giles
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "young goat"
      • Description:

        One of those names that most Americans find just too too tea-sippingly British to consider; its meaning has led to occasional use for Capricorn boys.
    • Guthrie
      • Origin:

        Scottish
      • Meaning:

        "windy place"
      • Description:

        Guthrie, one of the most attractive Scottish names that's also a surname, has a particularly romantic, windswept aura, with a touch of the buckaroo thrown in.
    • Grayer
      • Hallie
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "dweller at the meadow by the manor"
        • Description:

          Hallie -- it rhymes with alley and is not to be confused with Halle or Hailey or Holly -- is one of those comfy nicknamish names that are in favor in these complicated times.
      • Harbor
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Description:

          If you like names that are not really names -- some say, the wave of the future -- Harbor has an attractive sound as well as an appealing meaning and image.
      • Hazel
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "the hazelnut tree"
        • Description:

          Hazel has a pleasantly hazy, brownish-green-eyed, old-fashioned image that more and more parents are choosing to share. Former Old Lady name Hazel reentered the popularity lists in 1998 and now is near the top of the charts.
      • Huck
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Huckleberry, word name
        • Description:

          Though forever tied to Huck, short for Huckleberry, Finn, this is an undeniably cute short form that may have some life as part of the hipster taste for names like Duke and Bix.
      • Iris
        • Origin:

          Flower name; Greek
        • Meaning:

          "rainbow"
        • Description:

          Iris has so much going for it. It's a fashionable flower name. It's a mythological name, from the Greek goddess of the rainbow. And it's a classic name, always ranking in the girls' Top 1000 but now at its highest point ever.
      • Jace
        • Origin:

          Hebrew, diminutive of Jason
        • Meaning:

          "the Lord is salvation"
        • Description:

          Jace may sound like only half a name -- it's usually pronounced like the first half of Jason though some may consider it a spelling-out of the initials J. C. -- but it's a popular choice for baby boys. Jace has been heard on such TV shows as Teen Mom 2 and Duck Dynasty.
      • Jarvis
        • Origin:

          English variation of Gervase, meaning unknown
        • Description:

          Jarvis, one of the original two-syllable nouveau boys' choices, is a saint's name with a certain retro charm and a nice quirky feel. Though Jarvis peaked in the late 1880s, he is beginning to sound fresh again.
      • Jedidiah
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "beloved of the Lord"
        • Description:

          Jedidiah, an Old Testament name with a touch of Gunsmoke-era western panache, is right in line to be revived along with the other biblical -iah names.
      • Jeremy
        • Origin:

          English form of Jeremiah
        • Meaning:

          "appointed by God"
        • Description:

          This one-time trendy form of Jeremiah hovered just outside the Top 25 throughout the 1970s and 80s.
      • Jethro
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "excellence"
        • Description:

          Jethro, though the biblical father-in-law of Moses, has suffered for a long time from a Beverly Hillbilly image, but some really adventurous parents might consider updating and urbanizing it and transitioning it into the hip o-ending category.
      • Johnna