Unusual and On-Trend

  1. Alba
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "white"
    • Description:

      Alba is quietly making a behind-the-scenes comeback, perhaps thanks to actress turned baby-product mogul Jessica Alba. Last on the Top 1000 a century ago, the name was given to nearly 200 baby girls in the US last year. Alba might be tomorrow's successor to Ava and Ella. In Spain, Alba ranks among the Top 20 girls' names. Alba is the name of a character in The Time Traveler's Wife.
  2. Albia
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Description:

      A rarely heard ancient Latin names for girls that has a not-so-appealing brand name feel. Try Alba instead.
  3. Alcott
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "dweller at the old cottage"
    • Description:

      Alcott evokes shades of nineteenth-century New England, and memories of the author of the books Little Women and Little Men. Louisa May Alcott was the daughter of Amos Bronson Alcott, noted educator, writer and philosopher, and colleague of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.
  4. Alec
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Alexander, Greek
    • Meaning:

      "defending men"
    • Description:

      Alec, though an old nickname for Alexander, is much fresher sounding than Alex, with the additional advantage, at least to some parents, of being distinctly male (there are as many girl Alexes these days as there are boys). While Alec has a clipped British image, it's actually one of the classic Greek names for boys, by way of father name Alexander.
  5. Aleda
    • Alessandra
      • Origin:

        Italian and Spanish variation of Alexandra
      • Meaning:

        "defending men"
      • Description:

        This softened version is even prettier than the original.
    • Alessia
      • Origin:

        Italian variation of Alexis
      • Meaning:

        "defending warrior"
      • Description:

        Young Canadian pop singer Alessia Cara has given this spicy-sounding name a new lease on life, propelling it into the Top 1000 in 2016. (It was one of the year's fastest-rising girls' names.) The main risk is that it feels so close to Alexa, Alicia, Alexis and Alyssa-- all becoming overused -- that it could be mistaken for one of those more familiar names.
    • Alette
      • Alexei
        • Origin:

          Russian, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "defending men"
        • Description:

          Alexei could well join the legion of Alex names popular in the US. There are countless opportunities to liven up Alexander, and Alexei (or Alexey) is one of the most straightforward and appealing.
      • Alida
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Adelaide
        • Description:

          Alida had a brief flurry of popularity a hundred years ago but is rarely used today. But given the rise of so many names related to Adelaide and Adeline, Alida might be rediscovered.
      • Alina
        • Origin:

          Slavic, Germanic, Arabic, Scottish
        • Meaning:

          "bright, beautiful; noble; delicate, soft; defending men"
        • Description:

          Alina has been drifting up the US popularity charts since the early 1980s, and now sits in in the Top 200. But Alina's real strength is in its international flexibility: The name ranks highly in a wide range of European, English speaking, and Latin American countries.
      • Allegra
        • Origin:

          Italian
        • Meaning:

          "joyous"
        • Description:

          In music, the term allegro means "quickly, lively tempo," which makes this quintessential Bohemian ballet dancer's name all the more appealing. Allegra is one of the most distinctive yet accessible girl names starting with A.
      • Alma
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "nurturing, soul"
        • Description:

          Alma is a somewhat solemn, soulful name that had a burst of popularity a century ago, then faded into the flowered wallpaper, and is now finding its footing once more.
      • Aloisa
        • Origin:

          German variation of Louisa
        • Meaning:

          "renowned warrior"
        • Description:

          Obscure form of an old-fashioned favorite that's poised to make a comeback. This version, which owes as much to Alison as to Louisa, has a stylish A beginning and a multi-syllabic feminine grace.
      • Alondra
        • Origin:

          Pet form of Alejandra or Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "lark"
        • Description:

          A Spanish TV show made this one popular, along with single-named Mexican singer, Alondra.
      • Aloysia
        • Altalune
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "over the moon"
          • Description:

            Altalune is an invention used by Uma Thurman and Arpad Busson as one of several middle names for their daughter, its Latin meaning roughly translated as "over the moon." Celebrity baby Altalune will be called the more familiar Luna for short.
        • Althea
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "with healing power"
          • Description:

            Althea is a poetic, almost ethereal name found in Greek myth and pastoral poetry, associated in modern times with the great tennis player Althea Gibson, the first African-American to win at Wimbledon.
        • Alula
          • Origin:

            Arabic
          • Meaning:

            "first leap"
          • Description:

            Alula, the palindromic name of the first double star to be identified as physically related to its twin, would make the perfect name for a first-born twin. Ideas (we're only half joking) for the second born: Aviva, Aziza, Otto. Alula is reminiscent of the unusual name chosen by Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen for their second daughter: Elula, a month name from the Hebrew calendar.
        • Alva
          • Origin:

            English form of Irish Ailbhe
          • Meaning:

            "white"
          • Description:

            While the male Alva or Alvah relates directly to the minor Biblical character, the female version is more likely an Anglicized form of the Irish name Ailbhe. Best known as Thomas Edison's middle name, Alva has true unisex roots.