Names For Characters (Girls)

  1. Orabella
    • Origin:

      Latin variation of Arabella
    • Meaning:

      "beautiful altar"
    • Description:

      Lacks the vintage charm of the original Arabella, but with the love for all names Bella, it might appeal to some.
  2. Orella
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "announcement from the gods, oracle"
    • Description:

      A pleasantly unfamiliar addition to the ella family of names.
  3. Orla
    • Origin:

      Irish
    • Meaning:

      "golden princess"
    • Description:

      Orla is an Irish name closely associated with the high king Brian Boru, as it was the name of his sister, daughter and niece. It was very popular in the Middle Ages – the fourth most popular name in twelfth century Ireland – and has become popular again in Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales today. In Irish, the name is commonly spelled Orlaith or Orlagh.
  4. Ourania
    • Oenone
      • Paloma
        • Origin:

          Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "dove"
        • Description:

          Paloma is vibrant and ruby-lipped a la jewelry designer Paloma Picasso, but it also suggests peace, as symbolized by the dove. Paloma is a highly recommended striking but soft name, one of the best of the names that mean peace and girls' names starting with P.
      • Panthea
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "all the gods"
        • Description:

          Anthea would be simpler and prettier, though Panthea has possibilities.
      • Perrine
        • Origin:

          Feminine variation of Perry or Peter
        • Description:

          Five girls were given the name Perrine last year. More modern-sounding are Perrin, Perry, or even Petra.
      • Pomeline
        • Origin:

          French, related to "apple"
        • Meaning:

          "apple"
        • Description:

          A rarely heard--even in France--name, most prominent as the third name of Charlotte Marie Pomeline Casiraghi, the daughter of Princess Caroline of Monaco and granddaughter of Grace Kelly.
      • Phaenna
        • Proserpina
          • Reverie
            • Origin:

              Word name
            • Description:

              Reverie is a strong-sounding word for an ethereal, dreamlike state -- a perfect contrast and meaning for a word that intends to become a first name. Popular mommy blogger Rebecca Woolf of Girls Gone Child named one of her twin daughters Reverie, setting off a groundswell of interest.
          • Rinoa
            • Runa
              • Samira
                • Origin:

                  Arabic
                • Meaning:

                  "companion in evening conversation"
                • Description:

                  Shiny cousin of Samara with an intriguing meaning. Increasingly associated with the charming Samira Wiley, a perennial scene-stealer on "Orange is the New Black" and "The Handmaid's Tale."
              • Sarai
                • Origin:

                  Hebrew
                • Meaning:

                  "princess"
                • Description:

                  Sharp but sweet, ancient but with a contemporary sound, Sarai has been rising steadily up the US charts since the 90s and now sits comfortably in the Top 1000. In the Old Testament, God changed Sarai's name to Sara, so this would make a clever and legitimate honor name for an ancestral Sarah.
              • Soleil
                • Origin:

                  French
                • Meaning:

                  "sun"
                • Description:

                  An attractive French word name known here via former child TV star Soleil Moon Frye, aka Punky Brewster. It started to be lightly used in the U.S. in the 1920s and is now attracting some attention as both a sunny nature and an international word name. It's currently in the Nameberry Top 500.
              • Sora
                • Origin:

                  Japanese or Korean
                • Meaning:

                  "sky; conch shell"
                • Description:

                  A simple and pretty multicultural name: as a Japanese name, it's unisex and means "sky"; as a Korean name, it's feminine and means "conch shell".
              • Serevina
                • Serevine