Dog Names for large or small or young or old

  1. Montgomery
    • Origin:

      Norman
    • Meaning:

      "man power"
    • Description:

      This image of this distinguished Anglo-Scottish surname, drawn from the French place name of the ancient castle of Saint Foi de Montgomery, is rapidly shifting from fusty and formal to cool. And dashing short form Monty (or Monte) nudges it to cute.
  2. Monty
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Montague, Montgomery
    • Description:

      Monty, a name with a World War II feel, is rarely used on its own. But we're hearing rumblings of a comeback and think that Monty, whatever it's short for, is an adorable vintage nickname name of the future.
  3. Moon
    • Origin:

      Word name
    • Description:

      The original oddball celebrity baby name, via Frank Zappa's daughter Moon Unit, who claims she's always liked it.
  4. Moose
    • Muffy
      • Origin:

        Nickname name
      • Description:

        Muffy is one of those nickname names that flourished in the Baby Boom era -- or was it only on television? -- and now is rarely used. Strictly speaking short for Muffin, few girls have been given Muffy as a proper name in any era, and when it was used, it was usually as a nickname for Mary or Margaret or some other traditional name.
    • Murphy
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "sea warrior"
      • Description:

        This jaunty Celtic surname -- the most common family name in both Ireland and the US -- is totally viable as a first. The arguably most famous Murphy is TV's Murphy Brown, and indeed the name is twice as common for baby girls as for baby boys today. But still, it's solidly gender neutral and works equally well for all sexes.
    • Marshmallow
      • Moonpie
        • Nacho
          • Origin:

            Word name or short form of Ignacio
          • Description:

            Not unless you want your son to grow up to be just like a wacky Jack Black character.
        • Nala
          • Origin:

            African, meaning unknown
          • Description:

            A Disney name—Nala was the friend who became the wife of Simba, hero of The Lion King. It debuted on the US Top 1000 in 2015.
        • Naomi
          • Origin:

            Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "pleasantness"
          • Description:

            Naomi was once a primarily Jewish name from the Old Testament that referenced the mother-in-law of Ruth. Because of this, it is a symbolic name given to girls on Shavuot when the story of Ruth is read in the synagogue.
        • Natalie
          • Origin:

            French variation of Russian Natalia
          • Meaning:

            "birthday of the Lord"
          • Description:

            Natalie—a Franco-Russian name—became Americanized years ago and is one of those surprising names that's always ranked among the girls' Top 1000 names in the US.
        • Natasha
          • Origin:

            Russian diminutive of Natalya
          • Meaning:

            "birthday of the Lord"
          • Description:

            Natasha, an appealing, still unusual name, entered the American mainstream post-Cold War but seems to have peaked in the eighties, replaced by the more straightforward Natalie. As is common for Natashas the world over, the Obamas shorten their Natasha's name to Sasha.
        • Nellie
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Helen, Eleanor, et al
          • Description:

            This ready-for-revival nickname name recalls the old Gay Nineties and bicycles-built-for-two era. In the US, Nellie is one of the most popular unique girl names, lying just beneath the Top 1000. About five times as many baby girls are named Nellie in the US today as shorter form Nell.
        • Nelson
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "son of Neil"
          • Description:

            Nelson is a rather stiff and dated surname name that is sometimes used to honor distinguished South African activist Nelson Mandela, as Celine Dion did for one of her twin boys. Other notable associations are with the British Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, novelist Nelson Algren and movie operetta star Nelson Eddy. It was also the given name of "Rabbit" Angstrom, protagonist of John Updike's series of novels.
        • Nina
          • Origin:

            Short form of names that end in -nina
          • Description:

            Nina is as multiethnic as you can get: Nina is a common nickname name in Spain and Russia, a Babylonian goddess of the oceans, and an Incan goddess of fire. Here and now, it's a stylish possibility that's been underused. "Weird Al" Yankovic chose this decidedly nonweird name for his daughter.
        • Nora
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Honora or Eleonora, Latin
          • Meaning:

            "honor or meaning unknown"
          • Description:

            Nora is a lovely, refined name that conjures up images of Belle Epoch ladies in fur-trimmed coats skating in Central Park. Long seen as a quintessentially Irish name though its roots are not in Ireland, Nora is a quietly stylish favorite that's tiptoed to the top of the popularity ladder.
        • Oakley
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "oak wood or clearing"
          • Description:

            As sturdy as Oak, but with stronger roots as a first name, Oakley ticks lots of boxes for modern trends. With its unisex vibe, it's nature-based meaning, it's surname-y feel, and it's popular -lee ending, it's not wonder Oakley is on the rise.
        • Oakley
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "oak wood or clearing"
          • Description:

            Oakley, with its nature name roots and its Annie Oakley charm, is a hot name for both genders but more than twice as popular for girls. This name made it into the Top 1000 for the first time in 2013, one of only four girl names starting with O to rank that high. A decade letter, it's aiming for the Top 100.
        • 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.