Rare Earth and Space Names for Girls

  1. Starlit
    • Origin:

      Word name
    • Description:

      In 2014, six little girls in the US were given the name Starlit. Starlit has a sweeter meaning than the similar Starlet, and a better ring than Starlight.
  2. Sun
    • Origin:

      Korean
    • Meaning:

      "good, kind, virtuous"
    • Description:

      A simple and appealing unisex Korean name with many possible meanings, depending on the hanja characters used. Coincides with the English word "sun", which is a nice bonus.
  3. Sunday
    • Origin:

      Day name, English from Latin
    • Meaning:

      "day of the Sun"
    • Description:

      Sunday is among the most usable of the day names with its sunny first syllable, its sweet sound, and its potential to be both a sassy or a spiritual choice. The name initially made headlines in 2008 when Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban chose it for their daughter, Sunday Rose. Although it had been widely written that Kidman and Urban named their baby after art patron Sunday Reed, Kidman says this was a myth, they just liked the name.
  4. Sunset
    • Origin:

      English word name
    • Description:

      Would make an unexpected middle name for a baby born at dusk.
  5. Swan
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "swan"
    • Description:

      Obsolete Swanhild gives way to oh-so-modern Swan, joining the flock of newly fashionable bird names such as Wren and Lark. In France, the Swann spelling is fashionable for both sexes. But Swan carries an image of grace, though perhaps also a bit of languor. It's a lovely and original name, right for our times.
  6. Saturn
    • Shine
      • Shiny
        • Southern
          • Sparkle
            • Stone
              • Sultana
                • Summit
                  • Sway
                    • Tawny
                      • Origin:

                        English word name
                      • Meaning:

                        "golden brown"
                      • Description:

                        Y-ending color adjectives like Tawny and Rusty are nowhere near as stylish as the more sophisticated Lilacs and Violets.
                    • Tea
                      • Origin:

                        Short form of Dorotea or Mattea
                      • Meaning:

                        "gift of God"
                      • Description:

                        As Theo and Thea get more popular, so do Teo and Tea, short forms of the Latinate variations of Theodore and Matthew -- which include Dorotea and Mattea. But like Theo and Thea, Tea can stand perfectly well on its own and blends seamlessly into any Anglophone or European culture, if that is your aim. Some may argue that the Tea version is the prettiest and it's certainly the sleekest.
                    • Teal
                      • Origin:

                        Bird and color name
                      • Description:

                        Teal is one of the prettiest and most straightforward of the new color names -- an ideal middle name choice.
                    • Tuesday
                      • Origin:

                        English
                      • Meaning:

                        "Tiu's Day,"
                      • Description:

                        When actress Susan Ker Weld changed her name to Tuesday, she opened up a whole calendar of possibilities. This was decades before the arrival of Sunday Rose Urban.
                    • Tulip
                      • Origin:

                        Flower name, from Persian
                      • Meaning:

                        "turban"
                      • Description:

                        One of the most unusual flower names, Tulip is cute but tough to pull off as a first. It has some celebrity cred via Charlie Tamara Tulip, twin daughter of Rebecca Romijn and Jerry O'Connell. It derives from Persian dulband "turban", due to the distinctive shape of the flowers.
                    • Talon