Word and Nature Names

  1. Star
    • Origin:

      Word name
    • Description:

      Most parents today would prefer the softer-sell Stella. But Star has symbolic power related to Christmas, so this could make one of the perfect names for December babies.
  2. Starla
    • Susannah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "lily"
      • Description:

        Susannah is by far the most stylish form of the classic name now that Susan and Suzanne have retired. Susannah has biblical and musical pedigrees, is impervious to trends, and has an irresistible, flowing rhythm. It can be spelled just as properly with or without the final 'h.'
    • Suzanne
      • Origin:

        French variation of Susan
      • Meaning:

        "lily"
      • Description:

        Suzanne became popular along with Susan but has just dropped out of the Top 1,000. Wait a generation (or two) in the US, though in France Suzanne is once again tres chic.
    • Scorpia
      • Skywynne
        • Sylvian
          • Todd
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "fox"
            • Description:

              A 1970s beach boy surfing buddy of Scott, Brad, and Chad, Todd is given to relatively few babies these days.
          • Thorn
            • Timberley
              • Timperley
                • Twilight
                  • Ursula
                    • Origin:

                      Latin
                    • Meaning:

                      "little female bear"
                    • Description:

                      A saint's name with a noteworthy literary background, including uses by Shakespeare in Two Gentlemen of Verona and Much Ado About Nothing, by Ben Johnson, Walter Scott, Longfellow, D. H. Lawrence and Neil Gaiman. In real life, her two most well known representatives are writer Ursula Le Guin and actress Ursula Andress. In literature, there is also Ursula Iguaran, a key, long-lived character in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's major work, One Hundred Years of Solitude.
                  • Violet
                    • Origin:

                      English from Latin
                    • Meaning:

                      "purple"
                    • Description:

                      Violet is soft and sweet, yet with a vivacious edge.

                  • Warren
                    • Origin:

                      English from French
                    • Meaning:

                      "park-keeper"
                    • Description:

                      Long lingering in limbo, Warren suddenly seems to be on the cusp of revival. One of the oldest recorded English surnames, Warren's popularity in the U.S. dates back to the nineteenth century, and by 1921, reached its peak at Number 24.
                  • Wednesday
                    • Origin:

                      English
                    • Meaning:

                      "Woden's day"
                    • Description:

                      Name made famous by the macabre character Wednesday – middle name: Friday – Addams is taken from the name of the day dedicated to the Anglo-Saxon god Woden, who relates to Mercury. Cartoonist author Charles Addams was said to choose the name because "Wednesday's child is full of woe."
                  • Whitney
                    • Origin:

                      English surname
                    • Meaning:

                      "white island"
                    • Description:

                      Yesterday's sensation that rose with the popularity of Whitney Houston. Whitney may have lost some of its style value, but it still sounds like one of the quintessential English names for girls. Today, you might want to shorten it to cool nickname Whit.
                  • Wilbur
                    • Origin:

                      German
                    • Meaning:

                      "resolute, brilliant"
                    • Description:

                      Wilbur is a stylish name in the UK whose merits are just starting to be discovered in the US. Wilbur, the loveable pig who Charlotte of the Web called Some Pig, is an inspirational hero. And Wilbur and Orville Wright were early aviationists.
                  • Willoughby
                    • Origin:

                      English
                    • Meaning:

                      "farm near the willows"
                    • Description:

                      Willoughby is an energetic last-name-first route to the popular short form Will, livelier than any of the two-syllable options. It could be picked up by parents attracted to the Willow sound for girls.
                  • Willoughby
                    • Origin:

                      English
                    • Meaning:

                      "farm near the willows"
                    • Description:

                      With Willow and Willa becoming more popular for girls, surname-name Willoughby could be a more unusual alternative. Its full form sounds appropriate for both genders, but can be shortened for girls to Willow, Willa, or even Bee.