flower and floral names

  1. Maple
    • Origin:

      English tree name from Latin
    • Meaning:

      "maple tree; tree of the Acer genus"
    • Description:

      Maple is one of those sweet-spot word names that sounds so almost name-like that it doesn't feel outlandish or strange, despite its relative newness as a given name. Just as Juniper is adjacent to June or Pippa, Clover like Chloe or Clara and Ember like Emma or Ebba, Maple is enough like Mabel, Maisie and Mae that it blends in well and has a touch of borrowed vintage charm.
  2. Marigold
    • Origin:

      Flower name, from English
    • Meaning:

      "golden flower"
    • Description:

      Marigold, once found almost exclusively in English novels and aristocratic nurseries, is beginning to be talked about and considered here. It has a sweet, sunny, quirky feel. The marigold was the symbol of the Virgin Mary.
  3. Melantha
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "dark flower"
    • Description:

      The th sound both softens and complicates this Melanie relative.
  4. Myosotis
    • Origin:

      Flower name, from Greek
    • Meaning:

      "mouse's ear; forget-me-not"
    • Description:

      The name of a genus of flowering plants commonly known as "forget-me-not", deriving from a Greek word meaning "mouse's ear", because of the shape of the plant's leaves. The Spanish form Miosoti is more often seen, though still very rare.
  5. Madder
    • Mayflower
      • Narges
        • Origin:

          Persian from the Greek
        • Meaning:

          "Narcissus flower"
        • Description:

          This name gets given to a handful of Persian girls each year in both the USA and the UK.
      • Ngaire
        • Origin:

          Maori
        • Meaning:

          "flax flower"
        • Description:

          This name is common in New Zealand and Australia, with famous bearers including TV producer Ngaire Fuata and academic and author Ngaire Woods. It is pronounced ng (like the end of sing) -EYE-ree.
      • Nigella
        • Origin:

          Feminine variation of Nigel; botanical name from Latin
        • Meaning:

          "black"
        • Description:

          A name that sounded unthinkably priggish until it became attached to Domestic Goddess British TV chef Nigella Lawson (named for her father), who gave it a big dollop of glamour.
      • Nesia
        • Orchid
          • Origin:

            From Greek
          • Meaning:

            "orchid flower"
          • Description:

            Orchid is a hothouse bloom that has not been plucked by many modern baby namers — yet. In the language of flowers, orchids symbolize love, beauty, and sophistication.
        • Ornella
          • Origin:

            Italian
          • Meaning:

            "flowering ash tree"
          • Description:

            Like many a popular name, Ornella is a theatrical creation. Italian playwright Gabriele d'Annunzio created this name for his dramatic heroine in the 1904 play La Figlia di Iorio. Ornella is a feminization of the orno or ornello, which is the Italian word for the Fraxinus Ornus, a type of tree which produces such sweet sap that it was compared to biblical manna.
        • Orquidea
          • Origin:

            Spanish, Portuguese
          • Meaning:

            "orchid"
          • Description:

            A rare Spanish and Portuguese flower name that is rarely heard elsewhere.
        • Peach
          • Origin:

            Fruit name
          • Description:

            Peach is one of those names that, a generation ago, would have been placed in the wacky celebrity baby name category. But now with the proliferation of word, nature, and yes, food names, Peach sounds adorably baby-ready.
        • Penthia
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "flower"
          • Description:

            Penthia might not be the most charming flower name, but as the lovely Penelope ascends, and the lovely Cynthia fades away, a compromise may be in order.
        • Peony
          • Origin:

            Flower name; Latin
          • Meaning:

            "healing"
          • Description:

            One of the rarest of the floral names, though not without some teasing potential. Peony is a historical 1948 novel by Pearl S. Buck.
        • Pepper
          • Origin:

            Sanskrit
          • Meaning:

            "berry"
          • Description:

            There's a football player called Pepper (born Thomas and given the childhood nickname for sprinkling pepper on his cereal) Johnson -- but this sounds more like the name of a cheerleader.
        • Peregrine
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "traveler, pilgrim"
          • Description:

            Peregrine is considered to be an elegantly aristocratic name in England, but has never made it to the U.S., where it has been seen as extravagantly eccentric. In the new naming climate, though, it's not beyond consideration — in fact it's already been chosen by at least one Berry.
        • Petal
          • Origin:

            English from Greek
          • Meaning:

            "leaf"
          • Description:

            Petal is the soft and sweet-smelling name of a character in the novel and film, The Shipping News. With the rise of such flower names as Poppy and Posy, we believe Petal — down-to-earth yet romantic — has its own appealingly distinctive style.
        • Pluma