Pokemon Crystal

  1. Kevin
    • Origin:

      Irish
    • Meaning:

      "handsome"
    • Description:

      Kevin came to the US with the large wave of Irish Immigrants after World War I, hitting the US Top 1000 list for the first time in 1921 and never leaving.
  2. Kim
    • Origin:

      English diminutive of Kimberly; Vietnamese; Scandinavian diminutive of Joachima; Soviet name
    • Description:

      Kim was the coolest name... of the 1960s. Kim was popularized by actress Kim Novak, and its energy is still maintained by rapper Lil' Kim, but it holds lil' or no appeal for new babies. Parents who like Kim's short, sweet sound might look to a choice such as Sam, Lou, or Belle.
  3. Kipp
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "pointed hill"
    • Description:

      Full name that sounds more like a short form; more likely to be spelled Kip.
  4. Kirk
    • Origin:

      Norse
    • Meaning:

      "church"
    • Description:

      Far more friendly and open than similar one-syllable names like Kent, Kurt, and Karl, it's been associated for more than half a century with actor Kirk Douglas, whose birth name was Issur Danielovitch Demsky.
  5. Kurt
    • Origin:

      German, diminutive of Kurtis
    • Meaning:

      "courteous, polite"
    • Description:

      A name that defines itself, a bit more curt in the harder K version.
  6. Kyle
    • Origin:

      Scottish
    • Meaning:

      "narrow spit of land"
    • Description:

      Kyle is still appreciated by thousands of parents each year for its combination of simplicity, strength, and style; it was in the Top 20 for most of the nineties. As a Scottish surname, it dates back to the fifteenth century.
  7. Kiyo
    • Koga
      • Krise
        • Kuni
          • Lance
            • Origin:

              English variation of Lanzo, German "land"
            • Meaning:

              "land"
            • Description:

              Though the fuller Lancelot has for the most part been shunned as a 'too-much-name' name, the short form Lance has been consistently in or around the Top 500 since 1938, climbing as high as Number 76 in 1970. It was used as a character name by Walter Scott as far back as 1823. Lance is also the name of a medieval weapon, making this name all boy.
          • Larry
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of Lawrence, English from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "from Laurentium or bay laurel"
            • Description:

              Your friendly next-door neighbor...not your baby. Although Larry was once one of the most popular boys' names starting with L, that title now belongs to Liam.
          • Laura
            • Origin:

              English from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "from Laurentum or bay laurel"
            • Description:

              Laura is a hauntingly evocative perennial, never trendy, never dated, feminine without being fussy, with literary links stretching back to Dante. All this makes Laura a more solid choice than any of its more decorative counterparts and one of the most classic girl names starting with L.
          • Lea
            • Origin:

              Variation of Lee or Leah
            • Meaning:

              "meadow; weary"
            • Description:

              While traditionally pronounced as a homonym for Lee, Glee actress Lea Michele pronounces her name like Leah, and it may also rhyme with Freya. Regardless of your preferred pronunciation, it's interesting to note that Lea has always charted in the US Top 1000, despite coming close to the bottom a few times, making it one of the girl names starting with L that both fits in and stands out.
          • Leonard
            • Origin:

              German
            • Meaning:

              "brave lion"
            • Description:

              Leonard is the name of several saints, including one who is the patron saint of childhood, and another medieval saint who's the patron of prisoners--known for freeing prisoners he deemed worthy of God. Popular from 1900 to 1930, Leonard is perhaps more notable for those who dropped the name when they entered show biz than those who kept it: former Leonards include Roy Rogers and Tony Randall. Two musical Leonards did keep their names though--composer-conductor Leonard Bernstein and poet-singer Leonard Cohen. Leonard Woolf was the husband and publisher of great English novellist Virginia Woolf. These days, modern parents tend to prefer Leo or the romantic Italian Leonardo, especially since Leonard does not get pronounced with the trendy "Leo" sound.
          • Li
            • Origin:

              Hebrew or Chinese
            • Meaning:

              "to me, or logic, power, beauty"
            • Description:

              This short and sweet multicultural name has a lot of potential meanings packed into its two letters!
          • Lily
            • Origin:

              English flower name
            • Meaning:

              "lily"
            • Description:

              Lily is the most popular of the popular delicate century-old flower names now making a return, thanks to its many irresistible attributes: a cool elegance and a lovely sound, a symbol of purity and innocence, and a role in Christian imagery.
          • Linda
            • Origin:

              Spanish, Portuguese and Italian word name meaning "pretty"
            • Meaning:

              "pretty"
            • Description:

              Linda will live forever in baby name history for toppling Mary from its four hundred year reign as Number 1. Queen of Names in 1947, Linda has fallen even further in favor than Mary today.
          • Liz
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of Elizabeth
            • Description:

              A girl named Liz on her birth certificate could feel deprived of her full identity. Call her Liz, but name her Elizabeth -- or at least Lizbeth or Eliza.
          • Lloyd
            • Origin:

              Welsh
            • Meaning:

              "gray"
            • Description:

              This Welsh surname was taken up as a first in the English-speaking world in the early twentieth century, originally as a nickname for someone gray-haired. The original Welsh name was Llwyd, and pronounced LHOO-eed. Beau Bridges was christened Lloyd after his actor father.