Forgotten Vintage Gems For Modern Baby Girls

  1. Ora
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "prayer"
    • Description:

      Short and slight, with great potential now that names like Ava, Ida and Orla are popular. Ora Beach is a tourist destination on Seram Island, Indonesia.
  2. Ottilie
    • Origin:

      German, French
    • Meaning:

      "prosperous in battle"
    • Description:

      Ottilie is trending in the UK, where the pronounced T helps the name sound pretty and delicate, rather like Amelie and Elodie. Ottilie is less popular in the US, where many Americans pronounce it as a near-homonym for "oddly".
  3. Ola
    • Palma
      • Origin:

        Latin place-name
      • Description:

        Palma is an appealing Latin name that's both geographical -- it's the romantic city on the Spanish island of Majorca -- and botanical, relating to the palm frond. Sometimes given to girls born on Palm Sunday.
    • Pansy
      • Origin:

        English flower name from French
      • Meaning:

        "thought"
      • Description:

        Pansy is an early floral name that lost credibility when it became a derogatory slang term for gay people. Better these days: Posy or Poppy.
    • Patsy
      • Origin:

        English, diminutive of Patricia
      • Meaning:

        "noble, patrician"
      • Description:

        This sassy, spunky name was used for the mostly Irish jump-roping pigtailed girls of the thirties and forties -- and some Irish and Italian boys as well. Its most noted bearer was iconic country music singer Patsy Cline (born Virginia), and was sighted most recently in the Ab Fab movie. After reaching Number 52 in the late thirties, it dropped off the list completely in 1970--and we're not anticipating a return.
    • Pearlie
      • Permelia
        • Phyllis
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "green bough"
          • Description:

            Phyllis has been used by classical poets for the idealized pastoral maiden. A Greek mythological name of a woman who was turned into an almond tree, Phyllis was in the Top 100 from 1916 to 1958, reaching #24 in 1929, and has the (remote) possibility of joining other revived s-ending names like Iris. In the 'St Clare' book series by Enid Blyton Phyllis is nicknamed Fizz. Just a thought. Phyllida is a variation that sounds at once more old-fashioned and more stylish.
        • 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.
        • Queenie
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "queen"
          • Description:

            Wisecracking waitress name stuck in the luncheonette. Started as nickname for girls named Regina -- queen in Latin -- now mostly a canine choice.
        • Reba
          • Origin:

            Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "fourth born"
          • Description:

            Tied to country singer/sitcom star Reba McEntire.
        • Roma
          • Origin:

            Italian place-name
          • Description:

            Never as popular as Florence; today's parents might prefer Venezia, Verona, or Romy. It is also a Hindu name meaning "one with shiny hair" and is another name for the goddess Lakshmi.

        • Rosetta
          • Origin:

            Persian
          • Meaning:

            "splendid"
          • Description:

            Associated with the ancient Rosetta stone, this is also the pretty Italian pet form of Rosa.
        • Rosina
          • Rowena
            • Origin:

              Welsh
            • Meaning:

              "white spear or famous friend"
            • Description:

              A fabled storybook name via the heroine of Sir Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe (1819), which featured a heroine called Rowena of Hargottstanstede, and also a Harry Potter name, as Rowena Ravenclaw, founder of one of the Hogwarts houses.. Rowena has some old-fashioned charm, though most modern parents seem to prefer Rowen. Pronunciation, however, is NOT like Rowen with an a at the end, but with a long e and an emphasis on the middle syllable. She was on the popularity list until 1963, several years in the Top 500.
          • 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.
          • Sibyl
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "seer, oracle"
            • Description:

              The original but less common spelling of the ancient mythological name, now used mostly for fictional witches. But the rise of the lovely Lady Sybil Crawley on television's Downton Abbey and the fall of the multiple personality Sybil, a self-confessed fake, may give Sibyl and Sybil more credibility as a name.
          • Sigrid
            • Origin:

              Norse
            • Meaning:

              "fair victory"
            • Description:

              Sigrid is a distinctly Scandinavian name that is starting to edge out into the wider world, a la cousin Ingrid. Unfortunately, short form Siri is now off the table, but Sigrid is still a possibility.
          • Sina