ances tree

  1. Pierce
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "son of Piers"
    • Description:

      Actor Pierce Brosnan brings a strong helping of charm to this name. Pierce was actually a popular name long before Mr. Brosnan came along, from 1880 to the end of the 1930s.
  2. 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.
  3. Pieter
    • Pike
      • Origin:

        American animal name
      • Meaning:

        "pike, a fish"
      • Description:

        The field of nature names is constantly expanding to include all species of flowers and trees and animals and birds and even fish. In addition to its appeal for anglers, Pike recalls Zebulon Pike, the explorer who discovered and gave his name to Pike's Peak.
    • Poetry
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        A lyrical choice.
    • Polk
      • Polly
        • Origin:

          English variation of Molly
        • Description:

          An alternative to the no-longer-fresh Molly, the initial 'P' gives Polly a peppier sound, combining the cozy virtues of an old-timey name with the bounce of a barmaid.
      • Pomeroy
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "dweller by the apple orchard"
        • Description:

          This is an English surname dating back to 1086, but we don't see it having much of a first name future in the twenty-first century.
      • Powers
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Description:

          The singular version sounds more contemporary.
      • Prence
        • Prescott
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "priest's cottage"
          • Description:

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

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "chief, prince"
          • Description:

            Prince rose to its highest ranking in a century in 2015, and the tragic death of its most famous bearer in April 2016 propelled it even higher. The Purple Rain legend isn't its only tie to pop royalty: Michael Jackson chose it for not one but two of his sons. Royal names such as King and Prince, once thought of as canine, have begun to be used by human non-royals for their sons.
        • Princess
          • Origin:

            Word name
          • Meaning:

            "princess"
          • Description:

            Part of the trend for formerly canine royal names; this is one a little girl might love—up till the age of eight.
        • Priscilla
          • Origin:

            Latin, diminutive of Prisca
          • Meaning:

            "ancient"
          • Description:

            Despite her somewhat prissy, puritanical air, Priscilla has managed to stay widely used for well over a century -- it reached as high as Number 127 in 1940 -- appreciated for its delicacy and solid history.
        • Prudence
          • Origin:

            Virtue name
          • Meaning:

            "caution"
          • Description:

            Prudence, like Hope and Faith, is a Puritan virtue name with a quiet charm and sensitivity that is slowly returning to favor, though it hasn't yet registered on the charts.
        • Purplebranch
          • Quincy
            • Origin:

              French
            • Meaning:

              "estate of the fifth son"
            • Description:

              Quirky in the way that all Q names are quirky, Quincy was once a buttoned-up, patrician New England name, an image countered in recent years by the talented and ultracool musician Quincy Jones (middle name: Delight; nickname: Q).
          • Rachel
            • Origin:

              Hebrew
            • Meaning:

              "ewe"
            • Description:

              Rachel was derived from the Hebrew word rāchēl, meaning "ewe." In the Old Testament, Rachel was the favorite wife of Jacob, and mother of Joseph and Benjamin. International variations include the Spanish Raquel and Israeli Rahel.
          • Ralf
            • Ralph
              • Origin:

                English from German
              • Meaning:

                "wolf-counsel"
              • Description:

                Ralph has two diametrically different images: there's the suave Ralph Fiennes-type Brit (often pronounced Rafe), and then there's the Jackie Gleason blue-collar, bowling blowhard Ralph Kramden bus driver. It's all in the eye of the beholder, though its hip factor did rise when it was chosen for his son by cool U.K. actor Matthew Macfadyen.