Two syllables.

  1. Loris
    • Lorna
      • Origin:

        English literary name
      • Description:

        One of those names like Pamela, Vanessa and Wendy, Lorna was invented for a particular literary character--the protagonist of the 1869 novel Lorna Doone by R. D. Blackmore--and then perpetuated as the name of a shortbread cookie. The author claimed to have based it on the Scottish place-name, Lorn. In baby name limbo for quite some time, it was chosen by Judy Garland for her younger daughter, Lorna Luft. Lorna Simpson is an important contemporary American artist.
    • Mabel
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Amabel, Latin
      • Meaning:

        "lovable"
      • Description:

        Mabel is a saucy Victorian favorite rising in popularity in the US over the past decade, after a 50-year nap If you love offbeat old-fashioned names like Violet or Josephine, only sassier, Mabel is one for you to consider.
    • Maren
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "sea"
      • Description:

        Maren is one of the many twenty-first-century takes on Mary--but we find the more classic Marin spelling preferable. When spelled Maren, the pronunciation seems more clearly to resemble Mary, with the emphasis on the first syllable. Marin, the spelling also used for the beautiful coastal county north of San Francisco, is often pronounced with the emphasis on the second syllable, as in Marie.
    • Marlene
      • Origin:

        German variation of Madeline; combination of Mary and Magdalen
      • Description:

        Marlene Dietrich made it famous when she condensed her first two names, Maria and Magdalena. Now more often pronounced with two syllables rather than three.
    • Mavis
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "songbird"
      • Description:

        Mavis, another word for the song thrush, is also a relative of the Welsh word for strawberries, mefus. Mavis has something of a British World War II feel, a friend of Beryl and Doris, but it was quite popular in the U.S. a couple of decades earlier, peaking in the Roaring Twenties. With the renewed interest in names ending in 's' — and in bird names — Mavis could make a return, especially with the new interest in Maeve, and in fact, it reentered the US Top 1000 after a 50-year absence in 2016.
    • Merrick
      • Origin:

        Anglo-Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "fame, power"
      • Description:

        A strong, attractive surname name with a mix of possible origins: either from the Welsh first name Meuric,which is a form of Maurice, and contains Germanic elements meaning fame and power, or from a Scottish Gaelic word meaning a fork in a river or a road, which led to the name of several places named Merrick in Scotland. The Supreme Court saga of Justice Merrick Garland almost certainly caused the bump in popularity that propelled Merrick to its US Top 1000 debut in 2016.

        Despite its ancient history, Merrick these days sounds more modern than the somewhat tired Derek.

    • Micah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "who is like the Lord"
      • Description:

        The bright, playful Micah feels like the middle ground between the safe, solid qualities of Michael and the flair and energy of Luca. Both Biblical and stylish, Micah is proving popular among parents today.
    • Mira
      • Origin:

        Latin, Slavic, Arabic, Sanskrit
      • Meaning:

        "admirable; peace; female ruler; ocean"
      • Description:

        This name owes its present life to actress Sorvino. Mira and Mirra have an arty aura.
    • Morris
      • Origin:

        English variation of Maurice
      • Meaning:

        "dark-skinned"
      • Description:

        Morris is as quiet and comfortable as a Morris chair, and has the same vintage feel. Once a Top 100 name in the early 1900s, Morris fell completely off the roster in 1995, probably due to lingering fallout from his identification with Morris the cat's ("the world's most finicky cat") 9 Lives cat food commercials.
    • Myrthe
      • Origin:

        Dutch variation of Myrtle
      • Description:

        This botanical name is one of the few Dutch names that could work outside the Netherlands, especially in Germany or Scandinavia.
    • Nara
      • Origin:

        Japanese place name or Celtic
      • Meaning:

        "happy"
      • Description:

        Soft, simple, and far more unusual than Tara or Farrah. As a Japanese place name, it's been used occasionally as a surname and is beginning to be used as a first. Nara is also the name of a Hindu (male) God and the name means "man" in Hindi.
    • Nedda
      • Origin:

        Slavic
      • Meaning:

        "born on Sunday"
      • Description:

        Midcentury macramé-maker.
    • Neeva
      • Nelda
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "one who lives by the alder tree"
        • Description:

          Occasionally heard in Ireland, small chance of success here.
      • Nella
        • Nellie
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Helen, Eleanor, et al
          • Description:

            This ready-for-revival nickname name recalls the old Gay Nineties and bicycles-built-for-two era. In the US, Nellie is one of the most popular unique girl names, lying just beneath the Top 1000. About five times as many baby girls are named Nellie in the US today as shorter form Nell.
        • Nemy
          • Origin:

            Mende
          • Meaning:

            "sweet"
          • Description:

            Friendly and energetic name from the Mende language of West Africa.
        • Nessa
          • Origin:

            Scandinavian
          • Meaning:

            "headlands, promontory"
          • Description:

            Like its cousin Tessa, Nessa -- a shortening of Vanessa or Agnes or Anastasia among other possibilities -- is an attractive nickname that can stand on its own.
        • Nilla
          • Origin:

            African
          • Meaning:

            "glorious"
          • Description:

            Something slightly negative about that Nil beginning; more positive similar names would be Lilla or Willa, Lucilla or Priscilla. Nilla may also be a short form of the Scandinavian Gunilla.