Pretty, Whimsical and Strange

  1. Nouvel
    • Origin:

      French
    • Meaning:

      "new"
    • Description:

      Shot to fame as the middle name of Brangelina's daughter Shiloh Nouvel, after French architect Jean Nouvel.
  2. Nepenthe
    • Nettle
      • Nightfall
        • Normany
          • Odessa
            • Origin:

              Ukrainian place-name
            • Description:

              Odessa, a Ukrainian port city, was given its name by Catherine the Great, who was inspired by Homer's Odyssey. It would make an original and intriguing choice.
          • Ophelie
            • Origin:

              French variation of Ophelia
            • Meaning:

              "help"
            • Description:

              Though this name properly takes an accent over the first e, most Americans would probably have trouble pronouncing it with French elan.
          • Orchid
            • Origin:

              From Greek
            • Meaning:

              "orchid flower"
            • Description:

              Orchid is a hothouse bloom that has not been plucked by many modern baby namers — yet. In the language of flowers, orchids symbolize love, beauty, and sophistication.
          • Ottilie
            • Origin:

              German, French
            • Meaning:

              "prosperous in battle"
            • Description:

              Ottilie is trending in the UK, where the pronounced T helps the name sound pretty and delicate, rather like Amelie and Elodie. Ottilie is less popular in the US, where many Americans pronounce it as a near-homonym for "oddly".
          • Ottoline
            • Origin:

              French and English, diminutive of Ottolie
            • Meaning:

              "prospers in battle"
            • Description:

              Curiously appealing, in a hoop-skirted, wasp-waisted way, Ottoline has recently entered the realm of modern possibility, especially since Sienna Miller chose it as the middle name of her daughter Marlowe.
          • Ovidia
            • Origin:

              Feminine variation of Ovidius, Roman family name
            • Meaning:

              "shepherd or sheep"
            • Description:

              Ovidia is the unusual feminine form of the ancient Roman Ovidius, most famous as the name of the exiled 1st century Roman poet Ovid. Modern male form Ovidio is known in Spain and Portugal. Ovida is another variation.
          • Peony
            • Origin:

              Flower name; Latin
            • Meaning:

              "healing"
            • Description:

              One of the rarest of the floral names, though not without some teasing potential. Peony is a historical 1948 novel by Pearl S. Buck.
          • Peridot
            • Origin:

              Arabic
            • Meaning:

              "a green gemstone"
            • Description:

              Peridot is the gem of the month of August, a vibrant green mineral, said to be good for helping people put the past behind them, and an interesting, undiscovered jewel name. It was regarded in ancient times as the symbol of the sun.
          • Persis
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "Persian woman"
            • Description:

              Parents seeking a distinctive New Testament name might consider this one. Adopted by some Puritans in the seventeenth century, Persis was used in the William Dean Howells novel The Rise of Silas Lapham for the wife of the protagonist.
          • Pixie
            • Origin:

              Swedish or Cornish
            • Meaning:

              "fairy"
            • Description:

              Pixie is a cute -- quite possibly too cute -- name that suddenly feels possible thanks to the craze for names that contain the letter x. Though its origin may be uncertain, a pixie is internationally recognized as a sprite or fairy: tiny, sometimes green, usually pointy-eared.
          • Posy
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "a bunch of flowers"
            • Description:

              A sweet, nostalgic nosegay kind of name, Posy has been long fashionable in England, a country of gardeners, but this pretty bouquet-of-flowers name is still rarely heard in the US, though it could be seen as a more unusual possible alternative to Rosy or Josie.
          • Prairie
            • Origin:

              English nature name
            • Meaning:

              "prairie"
            • Description:

              Unspecific place name with a wonderfully wide-open, spacious, western feel; used for a character in Thomas Pynchon's novel Vineland.
          • Praxis
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "practical"
            • Description:

              Praxis makes perfect? Though this mythological name sounds boyish, it's a female name, an equivalent for Aphrodite.
          • Primrose
            • Origin:

              English flower name
            • Meaning:

              "first rose"
            • Description:

              A quaint and quirky flower name, until recently considered a bit too prim for most American classrooms but brought back to life in recent years by the attractive character of Primrose "Prim" Everdeen in the Hunger Games series. In the Top 300 girl names in England and Wales and on Nameberry, Primrose remains rare in the US, but is made more accessible by a raft of sweet nickname options, including Rosie and Posy.
          • Reverie
            • Origin:

              Word name
            • Description:

              Reverie is a strong-sounding word for an ethereal, dreamlike state -- a perfect contrast and meaning for a word that intends to become a first name. Popular mommy blogger Rebecca Woolf of Girls Gone Child named one of her twin daughters Reverie, setting off a groundswell of interest.