Cowgirl Names

  1. Xiomara
    • Origin:

      Feminine variation of Guiomar, Spanish, Portuguese
    • Meaning:

      "famous in battle"
    • Description:

      The gorgeous and romantic name Xiomara popped into the Top 1000 from 2004-2011 after a contestant on America's Next Top Model increased interest in her rare name.
  2. Yola
    • Zadie
      • Origin:

        English variation of Sadie
      • Meaning:

        "princess"
      • Description:

        When aspiring British writer Sadie Smith decided to change her name to the more distinctive and zippy Zadie at the age of fourteen, this attention-magnet name was born. But though it might sound like a modern initial-switch, Zadie was actually Number 539 in 1881, remaining in the Top 1000 for almost thirty years.
    • Zelie
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "noble"
      • Description:

        A cute, zippy French saint's name that's picking up in popularity there, and starting to in the US as well. Zélie originated as a short form of Azélie, thought to derive from Adelaide via the Occitan form Azalaïs. Saint Zélie was born Marie-Azélie.
    • Zinnia
      • Origin:

        Flower name, from German surname
      • Meaning:

        "Zinn's flower"
      • Description:

        Zinnia is an unusual floral choice with a bit more edge and energy than most and beginning to find its way onto namers' wish lists of botanical possibilities. Named after an eighteenth German botanist called Johann Gottfried Zinn, it appears in Roald Dahl's Matilda as the young protagonist's mother.
    • Ziva
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "life"
      • Description:

        A zippy little international name. The Hebrew name relates to the month of Israeli independence. The Slavic Ziva (also spelled Živa and Siva) is a goddess of love, life and fertility.
    • Zora
      • Origin:

        Serbo-Croatian
      • Meaning:

        "dawn"
      • Description:

        Zora is a meaningful literary heroine name honoring Zora Neale Hurston, an important black writer and leader of the Harlem Renaissance.