City Names

  1. Orlando
    • Origin:

      Italian variation of Roland
    • Meaning:

      "famous throughout the land"
    • Description:

      Orlando, the ornate Italianate twist on the dated Roland, with a literary heritage stretching back to Shakespeare and before, has appealing book-ended o's, and is open to combination with almost any last name, a la British actor, Orlando Bloom.
  2. Owen
    • Origin:

      Welsh
    • Meaning:

      "young warrior; well-born"
    • Description:

      Owen, a resonant Celtic name, has ranked among the Top 100 boys' names in the US for 20 years and is now at its highest point ever.
  3. Orleans
    • Paris
      • Origin:

        French place-name
      • Description:

        Paris, a one-time mythical and Shakespearean boys' name, peaked in 2004 at Number 157 at least in part due to the highly publicized Paris Hilton. Michael Jackson used it for his daughter.
    • Parker
      • Origin:

        English occupational name
      • Meaning:

        "park-keeper"
      • Description:

        One of the first generation of surname names, along with Porter and Morgan, Parker's still one of the most appealing and remains firmly in the Top 100 for boys. About three times as many boys as girls get this occupational name. The association with Charlie Parker gives Parker itself a jazzy edge, and it also has a nature-related meaning. Rosie O'Donnell has a son named Parker.
    • Paz
      • Origin:

        Hebrew; Spanish
      • Meaning:

        "gold; peace"
      • Description:

        Paz, currently represented by actresses Paz Vega and Paz de la Huerts, would make a sparkling middle name choice. It originated as a title of the Virgin Mary, Our Lady of Peace, and is one of the names that mean peace, derived from the Latin word "pax".
    • Pearl
      • Origin:

        Latin gem name
      • Meaning:

        "pearl"
      • Description:

        Pearl, like Ruby, has begun to be polished up for a new generation of fashionable children after a century of jewelry box storage. The birthstone for the month of June, Pearl could also make a fresher middle name alternative to the overused Rose. Cool couple Maya Rudolph and Paul Thomas Anderson named their daughter Pearl Minnie, followed by Jack Osbourne, and several celebs have put it in the middle spot, as in Busy Philipps's Cricket Pearl, Jake Owen's Olive Pearl and Caleb Followill's Dixie Pearl .
    • Peyton
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "fighting-man's estate"
      • Description:

        Peyton is the most-used spelling of this popular name, thanks to football star Peyton Manning. It rose to fame in the 90s and was solidly - or statistically - unisex in the early 2000s, however, the 2010s saw it shift to a more feminine leaning option. Nevertheless, with its surname-style and gentle sounds, Peyton could still fit in with the likes of Grayson, Everett, and Cameron.
    • Phillip
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "lover of horses"
      • Description:

        Spelling variation of Philip. Exactly as many baby boys were named with the single 'l' spelling in 2017.
    • Phoenix
      • Origin:

        Arizona place-name and Greek
      • Meaning:

        "dark red"
      • Description:

        Effortlessly cool with a hint of the mystical, Phoenix rolls a lot of trends into one: it's a place-name and a bird name, it ends in the stylish letter x, it's got in-built nicknames, and it's unisex too. Familiar but not over-popular, Phoenix ranks in the US and UK Top 1000s.
    • Pierre
      • Origin:

        French variation of Peter
      • Meaning:

        "rock, stone"
      • Description:

        One of the most familiar — if not stereotypical — Gallic names. Pierre was a Top 5 name in France from the 19th century through 1940 and is now on a steady decline in its native land. In the US, Pierre was most common in the 1980s but it has never cracked the Top 300.
    • Prescott
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "priest's cottage"
      • Description:

        Prescott is one of several distinguished, upper-crusty surnames beginning with P.
    • Providence
      • Regina
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "queen"
        • Description:

          A classic name with regal elegance--Queen Victoria, like other queens, had Regina appended to her name. She was a Top 100 name in the 1960s.
      • Richmond
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "powerful protector"
        • Description:

          Richmond is a place-name — it's the capital of Virginia — that makes a fresh way to honor an ancestral Richard.
      • Rio
        • Origin:

          Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese
        • Meaning:

          "river or place of the cherry blossoms"
        • Description:

          Rio is a reductive ranchero place-name with an attractive Tex-Mex lilt. No Doubt's Tom Dumont has a son named Rio Atticus.
      • Rome
        • Origin:

          Place name, Latin, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "to hurry or flow; strength"
        • Description:

          Given that Rome is arguably the most important city in European history, it has been used as a first name remarkably little. However, with Roman in the Top 100 and one-syllable choices in vogue, it was only a matter of time before parents started looking toward the city's name as a potential baby name.
      • Rosa
        • Origin:

          Latinate variation of Rose
        • Meaning:

          "rose, a flower"
        • Description:

          As sweet-smelling as Rose but with an international flavour, Rosa is one of the most classic Portuguese, Spanish and Italian names, which is also favored by upper-class Brits, having an ample measure of vintage charm. Rosa has been on the popularity charts for every year that's been counted, especially popular from the 1880s through the beginning of the twentieth century.
      • Saint
        • Origin:

          English word name
        • Meaning:

          "saint"
        • Description:

          Saint as a descriptive word name was first chosen by rocker Pete Wentz for his younger son (baby brother is Bronx), and now Kim Kardashian and Kanye West have catapulted the name into the celebrity stratosphere by choosing it for their baby boy. The couple called their baby "Saint" throughout the pregnancy because his conception had been so difficult. Saint was named in our predictions for the top baby name trends of 2015, on descriptive word names which also include Royal and Noble, King and Rogue. Saint is moving beyond the group of names that are only celebrity baby names and into the general lexicon.
      • Salem
        • Origin:

          Biblical place-name or Arabic
        • Meaning:

          "safe"
        • Description:

          Salem is a Biblical place name in Canaan, believed to be the same as Jerusalem, as well as the Massachusetts town famous for its late 17th century witch trials. Salem is also a popular first name in its own right throughout the Arabic world.