Unique Names Ive Met

  1. Rowdy
    • Origin:

      American word name
    • Description:

      Rowdy was first famously used as a given name in the television series Rawhide, with the young Clint Eastwood playing Rowdy Yates. More recently, competitive swimmer Rowdy Gaines has been featured in a series of TV commercials, and a new badass baby name is gaining notice. The word Rowdy originated in the U.S. in the early 19th century, used to describe a rough or lawless backwoodsman. It's one of the distinctly American names.
  2. Ruger
    • Origin:

      German surname
    • Meaning:

      "renowned spear"
    • Description:

      More popular among German Shepherds than baby boys.
  3. Relik
    • Renaf
      • Sabra
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "prickly pear"
        • Description:

          Term for a native-born Israeli, first brought to notice in Edna Ferber's 1929 novel Cimarron. Prickly pear has neen interpreted to mean tough on the outside, soft and sweet within.
      • Sabrina
        • Origin:

          Celtic, Latin name for the River Severn
        • Description:

          Sabrina, the bewitchingly radiant name of a legendary Celtic goddess, is best known as the heroine of the eponymous film, originally played by Audrey Hepburn, and later as a teenage TV witch; it would make a distinctive alternative to the ultrapopular Samantha. Similar names you might also want to consider include Sabina and Serena.
      • Sarai
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "princess"
        • Description:

          In the Old Testament, God changed Sarai's name to Sara, so this would make a clever and legitimate honor name for an ancestral Sarah. Sarahi is another pretty variation to make the connection even more clear.
      • Savannah
        • Origin:

          Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "flat tropical grassland"
        • Description:

          A place name with a deep Southern accent, the once-obscure Savannah shot to fame, with others of its genre, on the heels of the best seller Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which was set in the mossy Georgia city of Savannah. Originally a substitute for the overused Samantha, Savannah is now becoming overused itself, long among the top girls' names starting with S.
      • Scout
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Description:

          Scout, a character nickname from To Kill a Mockingbird (her real name was Jean Louise), became a real-life possibility when Bruce Willis and Demi Moore used it for their now grown middle daughter, followed by Tom Berenger a few years later. A unisex choice that is growing in popularity for both genders -- but given to girls about four times more often than to boys -- it was picked by skater Tai Babilonia for her son and Kerri Walsh for her daughter Scout Margery.
      • Serafina
        • Origin:

          Italian and Spanish variation of Seraphina
        • Meaning:

          "ardent"
        • Description:

          Serafina is a name so lovely it's worthy of an angel. But the more stylish spelling today is Seraphina.
      • Serena
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "tranquil, serene"
        • Description:

          Serena, a name used since Roman times, was given fresh life by tennis star Williams, and then again with the leading character on Gossip Girl, Serena van der Woodsen. There have also been Serenas on soap operas and other shows from Bewitched to Law & Order.
      • Shaelee
        • Shalin
          • Sharla
            • Sheila
              • Origin:

                Irish variation of Cecilia
              • Meaning:

                "blind"
              • Description:

                Sheila peaked in popularity from the 1930s to the 1960s (she reached Number 49 in 1965), along with Maureen and Colleen; parents today would probably go back to the original Cecilia or forward to Shea.
            • Soren
              • Origin:

                Danish, Norwegian
              • Meaning:

                "stern"
              • Description:

                This gentle Scandinavian name, soft and sensitive, is being discovered in a major way by parents in the US. It's most closely identified with the nineteenth century philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, but there have been modern fictional Sorens as well, in The Matrix Reloaded and the book series Guardians of Ga'Hoole, Charlie and Lola, and Underworld.
            • Stockton
              • SaJatah
                • Sterlin
                  • Taggart
                    • Origin:

                      Irish
                    • Meaning:

                      "son of the priest"
                    • Description:

                      Not your typical jovial Irish surname; but has a dark, craggy appeal, and Tag as a nickname.