Place names/Geography

  1. Georgia
    • Origin:

      English, feminine variation of George
    • Meaning:

      "farmer"
    • Description:

      Georgia is so rich, lush and luscious, it's almost irresistible. Georgia's now a rising star among the feminizations of George, helped by associations with the southern state (named for British King George II) and painter Georgia O'Keeffe, with the Ray Charles song "Georgia On My Mind" or maybe "Sweet Georgia Brown" playing in the background.
  2. Graham
    • Origin:

      Scottish
    • Meaning:

      "gravelly homestead"
    • Description:

      Well used in England and Scotland since the fifties, the smooth and sophisticated Graham is catching on here.
  3. Gallatin
    • Graford
      • Henrietta
        • Origin:

          Feminine variation of Henry
        • Meaning:

          "estate ruler"
        • Description:

          Despite a return to such feminizations of male names as Josephine, Clementine, and Theodora, starchy Henrietta has not made it into that group. Still, if you look hard enough, you'll see that Henrietta has the same vintage charm.
      • Hurst
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "wooded hill"
        • Description:

           As a surname, it's most familiar as Hearst -- publishing magnate William Randolph and kidnapped granddaughter Patty. Few would use it if it wasn't their own family name.
      • Huxley
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "inhospitable place"
        • Description:

          Huxley is definitely rising as a surname name, with its X that makes almost any name cooler. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2015. The modern nicknames Hux and Huck certainly don't hurt.
      • Hawley
        • Houston
          • Indiana
            • Origin:

              American place-name
            • Meaning:

              "land of the Indians"
            • Description:

              Indiana is one of those place-names (think Camden and Trenton) that sounds cooler than the place that inspired it. Its fashionable -ana ending certainly sounds eminently name-like, and Indie/Indy/Indi is one of the hottest nickname names for girls right now.
          • Ingram
            • Origin:

              German
            • Meaning:

              "angel-raven"
            • Description:

              An undiscovered surname possibility with upscale overtones, could be enlivened with nickname Ingo.
          • Iola
            • Origin:

              Greek or Welsh
            • Meaning:

              "violet; beautiful lady"
            • Description:

              Isla is hot, Iona is cool – maybe it's time Iola got a second look? Last heard from on Carol Burnett's Mama's Family show, Iola feels like just the sort of uncommon, vowel-rich, vintage name that should be ripe for rediscovery.
          • Idalou
            • Itasca
              • Jubilee
                • Origin:

                  Hebrew
                • Meaning:

                  "ram's horn"
                • Description:

                  Jubilee has a joyous and jubilant aura, but it wouldn't be an easy name to carry, what with all that pressure to be a living, breathing, 24-7 party. Jubilee was the name selected by television's Duggars for their miscarried child.
              • Keene
                • Kingston
                  • Origin:

                    English
                  • Meaning:

                    "king's town"
                  • Description:

                    Chosen for their first son by musical couple Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale, this Jamaican place and elegant British surname also boasts the more regal yet user-friendly short form, King.
                • Kirby
                  • Origin:

                    English
                  • Meaning:

                    "church settlement"
                  • Description:

                    Unisex name around for several decades for boys and now ripe for girls.
                • Laredo
                  • Origin:

                    Place-name
                  • Description:

                    We've seen babies with Texas city names like Austin, Houston and Dallas--, why not the unexplored Laredo, which has a lot of cowboy charisma? Laredo might make for a more modern and creative namesake for an Uncle Lawrence/Larry--as could the related Laramie.
                • Liberty
                  • Origin:

                    Word name
                  • Description:

                    Less common than other virtue names, Liberty is nonetheless a name with a long American heritage.