Girls Names

  1. Accola
    • Bonnie
      • Origin:

        Scottish
      • Meaning:

        "beautiful, cheerful"
      • Description:

        Bonnie is an adorable nickname name, heading back up the popularity list after a 50-year nap. A Top 100 girls' name throughout the rest of the English-speaking world, Americans are later to jump on the Bonnie bandwagon but now it's trending here too.
    • BRAVERY
      • Bryce
        • Origin:

          Scottish surname
        • Meaning:

          "speckled, freckled"
        • Description:

          Bryce is the preferred spelling over Brice for both genders, with nearly 70 girls named Bryce in one recent year vs. only five called Brice. But note that there were over 3000 boys named Bryce and 240 named Brice, making this a predominantly male name. Actress Bryce Dallas Howard, daughter of director Ron, is the most notable female bearer of this name.
      • Bryn
        • Origin:

          Welsh
        • Meaning:

          "hill"
        • Description:

          Bryn is an up-and-coming gentle, yet substantial, Welsh name that would also be effective in the middle spot. In Wales it's a traditional boys' name, but it's far more popular for girls now in the US.
      • Calista
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "most beautiful"
        • Description:

          Spelled with either one 'l' or two, Calista came to the fore in 1997 when Calista Flockhart hit it big as Ally McBeal. Flockhart, who bears her mother's middle name, didn't just introduce a name, she introduced a whole sensibility. Pretty and delicate, Calista is definitely worthy of consideration, especially for parents with Greek roots.
      • Cambria
        • Origin:

          Place-name
        • Description:

          Most names that start with Cam- are on the upswing, so why not this obscure term for Wales as well as for a prehistoric time period.
      • Carlyn
        • Carys
          • Origin:

            Welsh
          • Meaning:

            "love"
          • Description:

            Familiar in Wales and England, this name was introduced to America when Welsh-born Catherine Zeta-Jones and husband Michael Douglas chose it for their daughter in 2003. Light, pretty, and distinctive in appearance, it didn't catch on in the US, where it was only given to 22 girls in 2023.
        • Cecilia
          • Origin:

            Feminine form of Cecil, Latin
          • Meaning:

            "blind"
          • Description:

            Cecilia is a lovely classic name deservedly enjoying a new turn in the sun. Always among the Top 500 girls' names in the US, Cecilia is now at its highest point ever.
        • Celine
          • Origin:

            French variation of Celeste
          • Meaning:

            "heavenly"
          • Description:

            French-Canadian singer Dion made us notice this variation. Although many parents would prefer the homonym Selene, which has a different derivation and means "moon," Celine has been a Top 1000 name every year since 2012, and was also on the list each year from 1994 to 2005. Celine is also a newly-chic French fashion label.
        • Cheyenne
          • Origin:

            Sioux
          • Meaning:

            "people of a different language"
          • Description:

            The name of a courageous tribe, Cheyenne became quite popular in the 1990s, inspiring a wide range of spelling variations—Shyanne is one example that's still on the rise.
        • Clementine
          • Origin:

            French feminine version of Clement, Latin
          • Meaning:

            "mild, merciful"
          • Description:

            Clementine is a Nameberry favorite that broke back into the US Top 1000 in 2014 after more than half a century off the list.
        • Clover
          • Origin:

            Flower name, from Old English
          • Meaning:

            "key"
          • Description:

            Clover is a charming, perky choice if you want to move beyond hothouse blooms like Rose and Lily, and it's recently become a new celeb favorite, chosen by both Neal McDonough and Natasha Gregson Wagner, who used it to honor her mother, Natalie Wood, one of whose most iconic films was Inside Daisy Clover.
        • Coco
          • Origin:

            Spanish and French pet name
          • Description:

            Coco came to prominence as the nickname of the legendary French designer Chanel (born Gabrielle) and has lately become a starbaby favorite, initially chosen by Courteney Cox for her daughter Coco Riley in 2004. At first it was the kind of name that the press loves to ridicule, but we predict Coco's heading for more broad acceptance and even popularity.
        • Cydney
          • Origin:

            Spelling variation of Sydney
          • Description:

            Unnecessary complication.
        • Cyra
          • Origin:

            Persian or Greek
          • Meaning:

            "sun or throne, or lord"
          • Description:

            Cyra is an unusual name that can be pronounced either SEER-a or SI-ra, rhyming with Keira or Tyra. This name may be a feminine variation of Cyrus but is also a Persian name that stands on its own. One noted bearer is writer Cyra McFadden.
        • Daisy
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Margaret or flower name, English
          • Meaning:

            "day's eye"
          • Description:

            Daisy, fresh, wholesome, and energetic, is one of the flower names that burst back into bloom after a century's hibernation. Originally a nickname for Margaret (the French Marguerite is the word for the flower), Daisy comes from the phrase "day's eye," because it opens its petals at daybreak.
        • Delaney
          • Origin:

            Irish
          • Meaning:

            "dark challenger; dark river"
          • Description:

            Delaney has been a popular surname-style choice since 90s, when it joined other Irish surnames such as Cassidy, Kennedy, and Mallory on the US Charts. Buoyant, bright, and cheerful, it ranks in the US Top 250 and is given to nearly 1300 babies every year.
        • Delany