Anthropologie trendsetters #2

  1. Oda
    • Origin:

      Scandinavian, short form of Odelia
    • Description:

      Ada, yes. Ida, maybe. But Oda, a Scandinavian version of Odelia, not really. To English speakers, it sounds too much like "odor".
  2. Ondine
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "little wave"
    • Description:

      Mythological spirit of the waters; spelled Undine, she was an Edith Wharton heroine.
  3. Ozzie
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Osmond, Oswald, or Oscar
    • Meaning:

      "divine; deer"
    • Description:

      Ozzy has been on the rise in recent years and currently sits in the Top 1000 in the UK and the US. The Ozzie spelling has yet to catch up, but has nevertheless gained more attention thanks to its popular counterpart. Given to 135 boys and to 50 girls in 2023, for every one Ozzie there are three Ozzys.
  4. Organza
    • Oualidia
      • Pam
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Pamela, English
        • Meaning:

          "all honey"
        • Description:

          This mild-mannered short form was Queen of the Prom in the fifties and sixties, but today is mostly heard on TV's The Office (and of course as one of the founders of Nameberry).
      • Parvati
        • Origin:

          Sanskrit
        • Meaning:

          "the daughter of the mountain"
        • Description:

          This Hindu goddess name is very popular in India. The goddess of love, fertility and devotion, representing female force, Parvati is the wife of Shiva and the mother of Ganesh. There is a Harry Potter character named Parvati Patil, a twin sister of Padma..
      • Paulina
        • Origin:

          Spanish, feminine variation of Paul
        • Meaning:

          "small"
        • Description:

          More stylish than either Paula or Pauline, it was given a glamour gloss by model Paulina Porizkova in the nineties.
      • Peach
        • Origin:

          Fruit name
        • Description:

          Peach is one of those names that, a generation ago, would have been placed in the wacky celebrity baby name category. But now with the proliferation of word, nature, and yes, food names, Peach sounds adorably baby-ready.
      • Peggy
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Margaret, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "pearl"
        • Description:

          Just when we had written off Peggy as the eternal perky, pug-nosed prom-queen she projected from the 1920s into the fifties, along came Mad Men, with intriguing mid-century characters with names like Joan and Betty--and Peggy, causing a bit of a re-think. MM's proto-feminist Peggy Olson was followed by Amy Adams's strong Oscar-nominated Peggy Dodd character in The Master.
      • Penny
        • Origin:

          English, diminutive of Penelope
        • Description:

          Like Peggy and Patsy, the kind of zesty moniker young Judy Garland would sport in her early let's-put-on-a-show flicks. It fell out of favor (and the Top 1000) for a while, but has recently rebounded by reentering the charts in 2013. Expect it to continue gaining traction as a result of surprise hit Penelope.
      • Percy
        • Origin:

          French surname from place name Perci-en-Auge
        • Description:

          Percy is an adorable old name that is finally shedding its pampered Little Lord Fauntleroy image in this new era of boys with soft yet traditionally male names like Jasper and Elijah. Originating as an aristocratic Norman name, Percy became fairly widespread in England--and to some extent in the US--as an offshoot of the fame of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.
      • Perla
        • Origin:

          Spanish variation of Pearl
        • Description:

          Consistently popular Latina gem name; good choice for those who can't shake Pearl's grandmotherly vibe.
      • Philippa
        • Origin:

          Greek, feminine variation of Philip
        • Meaning:

          "lover of horses"
        • Description:

          Philippa is a prime example of a boy's name adapted for girls that was common as crumpets in Cornwall, but rarely heard stateside. That was before the advent of royal sister-in-law Philippa Middleton, who goes by the lively nickname Pippa.
      • Posie
        • Origin:

          Variation of Posy or short form of Mariposa, English or Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "a bunch of flowers or butterfly"
        • Description:

          Posie and its near-identical twins Posy and Posey are delicate old-fashioned flower names of the type that are stylish today: Think Poppy, Marigold, Clover.
      • Priscilla
        • Origin:

          Latin, diminutive of Prisca
        • Meaning:

          "ancient"
        • Description:

          Despite her somewhat prissy, puritanical air, Priscilla has managed to stay widely used for well over a century -- it reached as high as Number 127 in 1940 -- appreciated for its delicacy and solid history.
      • Painterly
        • Palmas
          • Pazira
            • Phia