French Girl Names

  1. Lucinde
    • Lys
      • Madeleine
        • Origin:

          French variation of Magdalen
        • Meaning:

          "woman from Magdala or high tower"
        • Description:

          Sophisticated and sweet, delicate but substantial, Madeleine is the classic French variation of Magdalene.
      • Mallory
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "unfortunate"
        • Description:

          Early 1980s sitcom (Family Ties) name that has been well used ever since, with an upbeat three-syllable sound and a slightly tomboyish edge.
      • Margot
        • Origin:

          French, diminutive of Margaret
        • Meaning:

          "pearl"
        • Description:

          Margot is suddenly a star again. After a nearly-half century absence, it hopped back on the Top 1000 list in 2013 and is on the rise. The Margot spelling is now given to three times as many baby girls as the Margo one.
      • Marguerite
        • Origin:

          French variation of Margaret; also a flower name
        • Meaning:

          "pearl; daisy"
        • Description:

          Marguerite is a classic French name with a remnant of old-fashioned Gallic charm; and is also a variety of daisy. Chic again in Paris, it's definitely ripe for revival here.
      • Marie
        • Origin:

          French variation of Mary
        • Meaning:

          "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
        • Description:

          The ubiquitous French version of Mary came into the English-speaking world in the nineteenth century. In the United States, Marie was a huge hit at the turn of the last century and for the ensuing fifty years, becoming the seventh most popular name in the country for three years, from 1901 to 1904.
      • Marthe
        • Martine
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "warlike"
          • Description:

            Sleek and sophisticated.
        • Maxime
          • Melisande
            • Origin:

              French form of Millicent, German
            • Meaning:

              "strong in work"
            • Description:

              This old-time fairy tale name is rarely heard in the modern English-speaking world, but it's so, well, mellifluous, that it would make a lovely choice for a twenty-first century girl--a romanticized tribute to an Aunt Melissa or Melanie.
          • Narcisse
            • Natalie
              • Origin:

                French variation of Russian Natalia
              • Meaning:

                "birthday of the Lord"
              • Description:

                Natalie—a Franco-Russian name—became Americanized years ago and is one of those surprising names that's always ranked among the girls' Top 1000 names in the US.
            • Odette
              • Origin:

                French, from German
              • Meaning:

                "wealthy"
              • Description:

                Odette is the good swan in Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake, a role for which Natalie Portman won an Oscar ---and it would make a particularly soigne, sophisticated yet upbeat choice, unlike some of the more dated other 'ette'-ending names.
            • Ophelie
              • Origin:

                French variation of Ophelia
              • Meaning:

                "help"
              • Description:

                Though this name properly takes an accent over the first e, most Americans would probably have trouble pronouncing it with French elan.
            • Oriane
              • Origin:

                Latin via French
              • Meaning:

                "sunrise"
              • Description:

                A particularly beautiful member of the Orane/Oriana clan, Oriane is the first name of a major character in Proust's In Search Of Lost Time, the Duchesse de Guermantes.
            • Perline
              • Prisca
                • Origin:

                  Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "ancient"
                • Description:

                  The rarer long form of Priscilla, which comes from the Roman name Priscus, meaning "ancient".
              • Rosalie
                • Origin:

                  French variation of Latin Rosalia
                • Meaning:

                  "rose"
                • Description:

                  Rosalie hit its apex in 1938 and then slid straight downhill until it fell off the U.S. Top 1000 completely in the 1980s, only to spring back to life in 2009 as the name of a character in the Twilight series. The beautiful vampire Rosalie Hale has breathed fresh life back into this mid-century name, and the fact that the character is both sympathetic and relatively minor means Rosalie has the chance to thrive again as a baby name without feeling unduly tied to Twilight.
              • Sabine
                • Origin:

                  French and German form of Sabina, Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "Sabine"
                • Description:

                  This slightly more compact version of Sabina has ties to France and Germany. Unlike its sister name, Sabine has never charted in the United States Top 1000. Today, both names are given to roughly the same number of baby girls in the US, about 70 each year.