What About?

  1. Lizija
    • Lorelei
      • Origin:

        German
      • Meaning:

        "alluring, temptress"
      • Description:

        The lovely Lorelei, a name from old German legend, was a beautiful Rhine River seductress whose haunting voice led sailors to hazardous rocks that would cause them to be shipwrecked. And this siren image clung to the name for ages.
    • Lorilyn
      • Lorrenz
        • Lourdes
          • Origin:

            Basque
          • Meaning:

            "craggy slope"
          • Description:

            This name of the French town where a young peasant girl had a vision of the Virgin Mary in 1858 vaulted into the spotlight when Madonna chose it for her daughter, but few other families except for devout Roman Catholics have followed her lead (any more than they've used Rocco for their sons).
        • Lowri
          • Origin:

            Welsh, from Latin
          • Meaning:

            "laurel"
          • Description:

            This unusual and appealing form of Laura is popular in sections of Wales.
        • Lucerne
          • Origin:

            Swiss place-name or Latin
          • Meaning:

            "lamp"
          • Description:

            Projects the calm and pristine image of the picturesque Swiss lake and mountain town.
        • Lucinde
          • Lula
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of any Lu name
            • Description:

              Lula is one of the livelier nickname-names with the fashionable double-L sound: It joins Lulu, Lila, Lily, and Lou among the trendiest names today. Lula might be short for Talula and sisters or for Lucy or Louise, or may stand on its own two adorable feet. Lula was actually a Top 50 name in the late 1880's and continued in the Top 100 for a couple of decades more.
          • Luna
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "moon"
            • Description:

              The name of the Roman goddess of the moon, Luna is derived straight from the Latin word for moon, luna. Luna may be the name most likely to surprise someone from an older generation by its Top 10 status in the US and its widespread international popularity.
          • Mace
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "heavy club"
            • Description:

              Has a slight aura of danger, from its being two types of weapons and a looming character in the Star Wars films. Best left as a nickname for Mason.
          • Madrigal
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "song for unaccompanied voices"
            • Description:

              Madrigal might be a pretty and highly distinctive choice for a child of a musical family--or for the parent looking for a less conventional path to the nickname Maddie than Madeline or Madison . Definitely more striking than Cadence or even the increasingly popular Aria.
          • Mael
            • Origin:

              French or Breton
            • Meaning:

              "chief or prince"
            • Description:

              The name of a fifth century Breton saint, Mael is a popular boys' name in contemporary France, though it is usually spelled with a diaeresis or umlaut - Maël. Mael is the Breton spelling, and the pronunciation is almost like the English word mile, with two distinctive syllables.
          • Maeve
            • Origin:

              Irish
            • Meaning:

              "she who intoxicates"
            • Description:

              Maeve is a short and sweet name that has become one of the most stylish Irish names for girls in the modern US. Maeve would make an excellent first or middle name choice, with more heft than Mae/May and more modern charm than Mavis.
          • Magali
            • Maia
              • Origin:

                Greek
              • Meaning:

                "mother"
              • Description:

                Maia was derived from the Greek word maia, meaning "mother." In Greek legend, she was the fair-haired daughter of Atlas who mothered Zeus's favorite illegitimate son, Hermes. To the Romans, Maia was the incarnation of the earth mother and goddess of spring, after whom they named the month of May. Maya is the more common spelling.
            • Mair
              • Origin:

                Welsh form of Mary
              • Description:

                One of the many international versions of Mary that could make an unusual alternative. The similar sound to Maya/Maia could be a plus or a minus.

            • Makaila
              • Malakai
                • Origin:

                  Fijian and Tongan form of Malachi
                • Description:

                  Malakai puts a South Sea Island spin on the Biblical Malachi, which may be just what It needs to fit in with contemporary trends.
              • Malina
                • Origin:

                  Feminine form of Malcolm or spelling variation of Melina or Polish, Bulgarian, Serbian
                • Meaning:

                  "raspberry"
                • Description:

                  Malina is a synthetic-feeling name that may be a feminization of the Scottish Malcolm or a spelling twist on the Greek Melina and that also has a fruit meaning in several Eastern European languages. For all that it's a little bit of lots of things, Malina doesn't feel very much like itself.