Beautiful, Chic French Names for Baby Girls

  1. Priscille
    • Quincy
      • Origin:

        French from Latin
      • Meaning:

        "estate of the fifth son"
      • Description:

        Quincy is a Presidential surname name that actually sounds both cute and strong when used for a girl. For the first time ever, Quincy joined the Top 1000 roster for girls in 2023, given to over 250 baby girls that year.
    • Rachelle
      • Origin:

        French variation of Rachel
      • Description:

        Elaboration of Rachel sometimes seen in France, but more rarely here.
    • Reinette
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "little queen"
      • Description:

        Reinette was the childhood nickname of Madame La Pompadour, perhaps a cute short form for Regina or Reina but hardly worthy of the full name on the birth certificate today.
    • Remi
      • Origin:

        French, variation of Remy
      • Meaning:

        "oarsman"
      • Description:

        Adorable name that's fashionable and keeps gaining momentum. Remi entered the US Top 1000 in 2013 and is now approaching the Top 100. The Remi spelling is more popular for girls, while Remy is more popular for boys, both both spellings are in the Top 1000 for both genders. That's a remarkable success story for a name that, in the late 1900s, was given to only a handful of babies in the US.
    • Rene
      • Origin:

        Variation of Renee
      • Meaning:

        "reborn"
      • Description:

        This name is hanging on as Renee, thanks to Ms. Zellweger, and in newer forms Renae and Renny.
    • 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.
    • Rosemarie
      • Origin:

        Combination of Rose and Marie
      • Meaning:

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

        Rosemarie had its moment in the sun back in the middle of the last century, when parents were looking for new ways to recycle traditional family names. So a child might combine her two grandma's names and become Rosemarie (or Annmarie or Maryjean), but these combination names feel dated now.
    • Rosemonde
      • Roux
        • Origin:

          French From Latin
        • Meaning:

          "russet"
        • Description:

          Roux, a color name meaning russet or reddish brown, is a possible middle name for your little auburn-haired babe, though a post-Hunger Games child would more likely be called Rue. Roux is also a culinary term for a mixture of fat and flour used in French cooking to make sauces.
      • Seraphine
        • Origin:

          French from Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "burning ones"
        • Description:

          Seraphine is the Gallic version of the angelic name Seraphina. But while Seraphina has been rising rapidly since Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck chose it for their second daughter, Seraphine has been largely ignored, though we believe the French vowel-sound ending will soon be more stylish than the a-endings that have predominated in girls' names for years.
      • Sherry
        • Origin:

          Phonetic variation of French Cheri; also a Spanish fortified wine
        • Description:

          Peppy cheerleader name of the 1960s and 70s that's sure to evoke the Four Seasons song of that name.
      • Sidney
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "Saint Denis"
        • Description:

          While Sidney in this spelling has a long history as a girls' name, it fell off the Top 1000 from the early 50s until 1990. Then it reemerged as one of the newly chic androgynous names for girls, rising into the Top 300 before falling off the Top 1000 list again in 2016. Sydney is now the more fashionable form.
      • Sigourney
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "daring king"
        • Description:

          Actress Sigourney -- born Susan -- Weaver made this unusual name (which she found in The Great Gatsby) famous, if not popular.
      • Silvie
        • Simone
          • Origin:

            French, feminine variation of Hebrew Simon
          • Meaning:

            "hearkening"
          • Description:

            Simone, the elegant French feminization of Simon, strikes that all-important balance between unusual and familiar, and it's oozing with Gallic sophistication. Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson has a daughter named Simone; Chris Rock used it in the middle place for his daughter, as did Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates
        • Solange
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "solemn"
          • Description:

            This is a soft, soignée French girls' namethat has become familiar here via singer Solange Knowles, younger sister of Beyonce.
        • Soleil
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "sun"
          • Description:

            An attractive French word name known here via former child TV star Soleil Moon Frye, aka Punky Brewster. It started to be lightly used in the U.S. in the 1920s and is now attracting some attention as both a sunny nature and an international word name. It's currently in the Nameberry Top 500.
        • Solene
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "with solemnity"
          • Description:

            Solene is a variation of Solange fashionable in recent years in France and a new hit name on Nameberry.
        • Sophie
          • Origin:

            French variation of Sophia
          • Meaning:

            "wisdom"
          • Description:

            Sophie is the French form of the Greek Sophia, for which it is also commonly used as a nickname. Given Sophia's long standing among the Top 10 girl names in the US, Sophie may feel more popular than it actually is.