Word Names for Girls

  1. Azalea
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "azalea, a flower"
    • Description:

      Azalea is one of the fresher flower names, along with Zinnia and Lilac, that are new to the name bouquet — in fact, it entered the Social Security list for the first time in 2012. So if Lily and Rose are too tame for you, consider this brilliant pink springtime blossom with a touch of the unusual that has been growing in popularity.
  2. Azure
    • Origin:

      English color name
    • Meaning:

      "sky blue"
    • Description:

      Azure is a colorful gender-neutral choice, currently used equally for baby girls and boys in the US. It refers to a specific shade of blue seen in a cloudless sky. Elon Musk recently revealed Azure to be the name of his daughter with Shivon Zilis, twin sister to Strider. While X and Y didn't stand a chance at greater popularity, parents may be inspired to use the name Azure following this celebrity endorsement.
  3. Apricot
    • Aquamarine
      • Bay
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "berry"
        • Description:

          One of the most usable of the pleasant, newly adopted nature/water names (like Lake and Ocean), especially in middle position.
      • Bee
        • Origin:

          Animal name or diminutive of Beatrice
        • Meaning:

          "she who brings happiness"
        • Description:

          We've seen Beatrice and Beatrix climb in popularity, along with traditional nickname Bea. And now there's Bee, giving it a buzzy nature world spin, plus a tie to popular late night TV''s Samantha Bee, not to mention Aunt Bee on the old The Andy Griffith Show TV show. Bee can theoretically be short for any girl names starting with B.
      • Bell
        • Origin:

          English and Scottish occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "ringer of the bell"
        • Description:

          These days, it's more likely you'd call your daughter the popular Belle or Bella.
      • Berry
        • Origin:

          Nature name
        • Description:

          With the recent arrival of fruit names like Apple and Plum, this more traditional example, symbolic of fertility, might rise in popularity. Photographer Berry Berenson was born Berinthia.
      • Beryl
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "sea-green jewel"
        • Description:

          Dated British favorite that never caught on in this country, where Jade remains the green gem of choice. Interesting namesakes: British writer Beryl Bainbridge and British aviatrix Beryl Markham.
      • Bianca
        • Origin:

          Italian
        • Meaning:

          "white"
        • Description:

          Bianca, the livelier Italian and Shakespearean version of Blanche, has been chosen by many American parents since the 1990s, just as Blanca is a favorite in the Spanish-speaking community. Its meaning of white relates to snow, making it one of the prime names for winter babies.
      • Birdie
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "bird"
        • Description:

          Birdie was until recently a middle-aged Ladies' Club member wearing a bird-decorated hat --but now it's just the kind of vintage nickname (think Hattie, Josie, Mamie, Millie) that's coming back into style in a big way. Actress Busy Philipps named her baby Birdie (inspired by First Lady Lady Bird Johnson), as did soap star Maura West.
      • Bliss
        • Origin:

          English word name
        • Description:

          A sweet, uplifting and still fairly uncommon modern virtue name. Its single syllable makes it especially good as a middle name, but it would also make a big impact in the first spot.
      • Blossom
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "to bloom"
        • Description:

          Now that parents have picked virtually every name in the garden, from the common Rose to the captivating Zinnia, some are reconsidering the old, more generic names like Flora and Posy and Blossom — which was last in favor in the 1920s and still has a Floradora showgirl aura.
      • Blue
        • Origin:

          Color name
        • Description:

          Blue suddenly came into the spotlight, as the unusual color name chosen by Beyonce and Jay-Z for their baby girl Blue Ivy. Blue is also a starbaby middle name du jour, used for both sexes in different spellings and forms, from John Travolta and Kelly Preston's Ella Bleu to Alicia Silverstone's Bear Blu. Dave 'The Edge' Evans named his daughter Blue Angel back in 1989.
      • Bluebell
        • Origin:

          Flower name from English
        • Meaning:

          "blue bell"
        • Description:

          Bluebell is one flower name that is used very quietly. Geri "Ginger Spice" Halliwell joined her former Spice Sisters in creative baby-naming with this adventurous -- some might say outlandish -- choice. Distinctive and charming? Or better suited to a farmyard animal? Your call.
      • Breeze
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Description:

          Most will see this as a refreshing middle name possibility, but Bristol Palin baby daddy Levi Johnston used it as a first name for his new daughter, Breeze Beretta.
      • Briar
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "a thorny patch"
        • Description:

          Fairy-tale memories of Sleeping Beauty inspire some parents—such as Rachel Bilson and Hayden Christensen—to call their daughters Briar Rose. But Briar plus a different middle name might work even better. It's one of the newly popular nature-word names, charting in the US for the first time in 2015 for both genders.
      • Brie
        • Origin:

          French, place-name of cheese-producing region
        • Description:

          Place-name and homonym of Bree, less popular than its enlargement, Brielle.
      • Brook
        • Origin:

          English nature name
        • Meaning:

          "small stream"
        • Description:

          Brooke variation – or is the other way around? – that makes it more a nature name, less an eighties-style androgynous name.
      • Brooklyn
        • Origin:

          Place-name from Dutch
        • Meaning:

          "marshland"
        • Description:

          Extreme makeover: Brooklyn has gone from jokey Borough Boy name in the 1990s to a leading girls' name starting with B. The status of New York's Brooklyn as hipster heaven is ironic as few bona fide Brooklyn hipsters would choose this name.