Boho Names from Free People

  1. Braxton
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "Brock's settlement"
    • Description:

      Braxton entered the popularity ranks in 1985 and has been climbing steadily ever since. It has gained from the all-powerful X-factor, and perhaps also from the reality TV show, Braxton Family Values, featuring singer Toni and her sisters Traci, Towanda, Trina and Tamar. Though it might sound new, there was a prominent Confederate Civil War general named Braxton Bragg.
  2. Brier
    • Blillie
      • Bohe
        • Bondi
          • Braidy
            • Cairo
              • Origin:

                Egyptian place-name, Arabic
              • Meaning:

                "the conqueror, the victorious"
              • Description:

                Cairo is an exciting place name possibility with upbeat o ending and an on-trend first syllable. Debuting in the US Top 1000 in 2015, it has been climbing ever since, and, as of 2023, it is given to more than 1000 babies each year.
            • Calista
              • Origin:

                Greek
              • Meaning:

                "most beautiful"
              • Description:

                Spelled with either one 'l' or two, Calista came to the fore in 1997 when Calista Flockhart hit it big as Ally McBeal. Flockhart, who bears her mother's middle name, didn't just introduce a name, she introduced a whole sensibility. Pretty and delicate, Calista is definitely worthy of consideration, especially for parents with Greek roots.
            • Carlisle
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "from the walled city"
              • Description:

                This stuffy English surname and hotel name took on Twilight cool when attached to vampire Carlisle Cullen. Inspired by the character, it's more popular in this spelling than as Carlyle and more widely used for boys than for girls.
            • Carrie
              • Origin:

                Diminutive of Carol or Caroline
              • Meaning:

                "free man"
              • Description:

                Carrie lives on mainly on the screen, as the new/old antiheroine of Stephen King's classic Carrie, as turn-of-the-21st-century diva Carrie Bradshaw of Sex & The City, and as Claire Danes' Emmy-winning character Carrie Mathison of Homeland. In real life, however, Carrie dropped off the Top 1000 a handful of years ago and, while the name retains some charm, shows no signs of making an imminent comeback. Try Cara instead.
            • Carter
              • Origin:

                English occupational name
              • Meaning:

                "transporter of goods by cart"
              • Description:

                Carter has ranked in the Top 100 since the the turn of the millennium, but despite its recent popularity, it's not a trendy new name. In fact, Carter is one of those names that just misses ranking in the US Top 1000 for its entire 140+ year history.
            • Cash
              • Origin:

                Word name; also diminutive of Cassius
              • Meaning:

                "hollow"
              • Description:

                With the popular 'ash' sound and a contemporary feel, Cash is a widely used name in the US. Used occasionally before the 2000s, Cash really took off in 2003, following the death of American musical legend, Johnny Cash.
            • Casper
              • Origin:

                Dutch form of Jasper, Persian
              • Meaning:

                "bringer of treasure"
              • Description:

                This ancient name, also spelled Caspar, is finally shedding its ghostly image and moving into the 21st century. Popular in the Netherlands and Scandinavia, where it's sometimes shortened to Cas, Casper could ride the style coattails of cousin Jasper. Casper was one of the Three Magi who brought gifts to the infant Jesus along with Melchior and Balthasar.
            • Cece
              • Origin:

                Short form of Cecelia, Latin
              • Meaning:

                "blind"
              • Description:

                Cece, all by itself, gained notice as the nickname of Jim and Pam's baby on television's The Office. On the show as in real life, Cece is often short for Cecelia or even Cecilia, but it can also be a short form of just about any C name. Cece -- or, less elegantly, CeCe -- can also be a stylish nickname name used all by itself, ala Coco and Lulu. If you really love girl names starting with C, this is one way to express your devotion every time you say your daughter's name!
            • Cedar
              • Origin:

                English and French from Latin tree name
              • Meaning:

                "cedar tree"
              • Description:

                Cedar is, like Ash, Oak, Pine and Ebony, one of the new tree/wood names that parents are starting to consider; this one is particularly aromatic.
            • Cherie
              • Origin:

                French
              • Meaning:

                "darling"
              • Description:

                The kind of French name that seemed daring -- and darling -- in the sixties.
            • Cirrus
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Description:

                Cirrus is a type of cloud formation characterized by thin, wispy strands (from the Latin cirrus "tendril; ringlet"). British cloudspotter Gavin Pretor-Pinney gave his eldest daughter the middle name Cirrus.
            • Citrine
              • Origin:

                Gemstone name
              • Description:

                Citrine is a type of quartz named after its citrus-colored hues. if Amethyst, Jasper, and Onyx (all other types of quartz) can be used, why not Citrine, which has a lovely French-sounding suffix. Citrine is one of the many rare and attractive girl names starting with C.
            • Clarissa
              • Origin:

                Elaboration of Clara
              • Meaning:

                "bright, clear"
              • Description:

                Clarissa, the daintier version of Claire, has a long literary history of its own, having been featured in the novels of Samuel Richardson, Charles Dickens, and Virginia Woolf—Clarissa was the title character of Mrs. Dalloway—not to mention the 1990s teen sitcom, Clarissa Explains it All.
            • Clarizza