The Fantastical List of Fantasy Names

  1. Alysanne
    • Alyse
      • Amabel
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "lovable"
        • Description:

          Amabel is an older name than Annabel and a lot more distinctive. Amabel was a very common name in the twelfth and thirteen centuries, then was revived during the nineteenth century British fad for medieval names.
      • Amadea
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "God's beloved"
        • Description:

          Amadea is a strong and musical feminine form of Amadeus, as in Mozart.
      • Amaia
        • Origin:

          Spanish or Basque
        • Meaning:

          "high place or end"
        • Description:

          This pretty and uncommon Basque name is all but unheard of in this country. Amaya is a spelling variation as well as a similar Japanese name meaning "night rain." With the newfound popularity of Amara and Amora, Amaia and Amaya are among the Spanish names for girls we'll be hearing a lot more of in the US.
      • Amalia
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "work"
        • Description:

          Amalia is a widely cross-cultural name, heard from Italy to Romania, Germany to Scandinavia. The current heir to the Dutch throne is Princess Catharina-Amalia of Orange. It can be pronounced ah-MAH-lee-a or ah-mah-LEE-a.
      • Amaranth
        • Origin:

          botanical name
        • Description:

          Amaranth is a beautiful herb with bright fuchsia flowers and a tasty seed that flavors many Eastern dishes. The name is filled with potential for the more adventurous namer, with nickname potential (Ammy, Mara) and a fresh sound that still fits in with all the Amelias and Ambers in the playground.
      • Amarantha
        • Origin:

          Flower name; Greek
        • Meaning:

          "unfading"
        • Description:

          Amarantha is a rare botanical name whose mythical equivalent was believed to be immortal. The Italian and Spanish form is the somewhat-more-acccessible Amaranta.
      • Amarinda
        • Amaris
          • Origin:

            Variation of Amara or Amariah
          • Description:

            Amaris sounds like "amorous," which is a loving name for a child, but doesn't really have a clear derivation or meaning of its own. The popular Amara is one of the most international names on the charts, with derivations and meanings in cultures that truly span the globe. And Amariah is an ancient Hebrew name. Still, Amaris is unusual and pretty, and that may be enough.
        • Ambrus
          • Origin:

            Hungarian
          • Meaning:

            "immortal"
          • Description:

            Hungarian form of Ambrose
        • Amelie
          • Origin:

            French variation of Amelia
          • Meaning:

            "work"
          • Description:

            Emily gets a Bohemian spin and a French accent when it becomes Amelie. This favorite among French girl names has been gaining notice here thanks to the charming 2001 French film Amelie; it entered the American popularity list in 2002 and is now solidly established in the Top 1000.
        • Amelina
          • Origin:

            Old German form of Emmeline and Amelia
          • Meaning:

            "work"
          • Description:

            Now that the range of names including the modern Emmeline and Amelia -- relatives of each other, but of neither Emily nor Emma -- has become so fashionable, the original root name Amelina is also due up for reconsideration. A lovely, delicate choice, its main disadvantage is that it sounds like a modern elaboration rather than the original name. And perhaps that it will be so often misspelled and mistaken for other forms of itself. But it is a lovely name with deep roots.
        • Amelisa
          • Amena
            • Origin:

              Celtic
            • Meaning:

              "honest, utterly pure"
            • Description:

              A possible Born Again name -- Amen -- in the same class as the still-popular Nevaeh (that's Heaven spelled backwards) and Trinity.
          • Amias
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "loved"
            • Description:

              Amias or Amyas is a unique name with an attractive sound and feel and a lovely meaning. Though it might sound like a Biblical name, it is not, but is a surname that may be related to Amadeus or even be a male version of Amy--which would make it one of the few boys' names to be derived from a girls'.
          • Aminta
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "defender"
            • Description:

              One of the romantic names favored by British pastoral poets, more appealing in its longer form, Araminta.
          • Amita
            • Origin:

              Sanskrit
            • Meaning:

              "infinite"
            • Description:

              Feminine form of Amit that's simple and lyrical and close in spirit to a familiar term for friendship.
          • Amory
            • Origin:

              German
            • Meaning:

              "industrious"
            • Description:

              Amory is the kind of executive-sounding surname name that became popular in the 1990s. Amory Blaine is the protagonist of the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel, This Side of Paradise.
          • Anaise
            • Origin:

              Variation of Anais
            • Description:

              Anais, the name forever attached to the daring French-born American novelist and diarist Anais Nin, is unusual and French enough without appending an e, though some may think it clarifies pronunciation.