sunkernplus's list of names

  1. Floren
    • Gaspar
      • Origin:

        Spanish variation of Casper
      • Description:

        The name of one of the Three Wise Men from the East is heard in several European countries, but rarely here.
    • Ginger
      • Origin:

        English diminutive
      • Description:

        Originally a unisex nickname for a redhead -- red hair is called "ginger" in Britain -- or for the name Virginia, Ginger perennially wears pink gingham and spike heels.
    • Gwennol
      • Origin:

        Cornish
      • Meaning:

        "swallow"
      • Description:

        A Cornish vocabulary bird, meaning the swallow bird, used in modern times.
    • Gwenora
      • Origin:

        Cornish form of Guinevere, Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "white shadow, white wave"
      • Description:

        Gwenora teeters on the line between unique gem and modern invention. But it's not a smoosh name fashioned from Gwen and Nora but an old Cornish form of Guinevere, like its much more famous sister Jennifer.
    • Hafren
      • Origin:

        Welsh river name
      • Description:

        The modern Welsh name for the River Severn, the longest river in Britain, which partly forms the border between England and Wales. Both Severn and Hafren come from the ancient British name Sabrina.
    • Hawthorn
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Hawthorne
      • Description:

        The version with the e at the end relates to novelist Nathaniel, so that may be the one most parents attracted to this unusual name would choose. Hawthorn nudges it toward the nature category: Hawthorn is a type of hedge.
    • Hawthorne
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "lives where hawthorn hedges grow"
      • Description:

        The great American novelist sets this above many other surnames (and nature names, for that matter), but it's still an imposing and adventurous choice. Do nicknames Hawk or Thorne make it more approachable? How about Hank or Hal instead?
    • Hayes
      • Origin:

        English surname and nature name
      • Meaning:

        "hedged area"
      • Description:

        One of those simple, straightforward English surnames -- and with a presidential pedigree -- that's easy to translate into a first. It was recently chosen by both Kevin Costner and Jessica Alba for their sons, which can likely be credited for its spike in popularity in the past few years. Surname names and nature names like Hayes, which qualifies on both counts, along with occupational names all make up the new generation of stylish English names for boys that go far beyond Harry and Edward.
    • Hayes
      • Origin:

        English surname
      • Meaning:

        "hedged area"
      • Description:

        Hayes is a stylish surname name given to more and more baby girls -- nearly 100 in the US last year. That's a considerable number, but many fewer than the nearly 1800 baby boys named Hayes.
    • Haze
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        Trippy variation on Hayes.
    • Haze
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        Smoky variation of Hayes.
    • Hazel
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "the hazelnut tree"
      • Description:

        Hazel has a pleasantly hazy, brownish-green-eyed, old-fashioned image that more and more parents are choosing to share. Former Old Lady name Hazel reentered the popularity lists in 1998 and now is near the top of the charts.
    • Heath
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "the heathland dweller"
      • Description:

        Rugged and outdoorsy, Heath was an obscure choice until the 1960s when it was used in the television series, The Big Valley for character Heath Barkley. It peaked in the 70s when it reached the Top 200, but has since been in decline, dropping out of the Top 1000 in 2023.
    • Heather
      • Origin:

        English botanical name
      • Meaning:

        "small shrub"
      • Description:

        This flower name was one of the most popular in her class in the seventies and eighties, a fact reflected in the 1989 movie Heathers, in which every snobby girl in the high school clique bears the name. Now, though still pretty and evocative of the Scottish moors, it has faded in favor of other purplish blooms. It fell out of the Top 1000 in 2016 after having been as high as Number 3 in 1975, when it was given to close to 25,000 girls. Across the pond in the UK however, it remains near the latter end of the Top 1000.
    • Hedra
      • Origin:

        Cornish
      • Meaning:

        "October"
      • Description:

        Hedra is the Cornish word for the month of October. With no resemblance between the words, Hedra makes a subtle, intriguing choice for an October-born daughter.
    • Helios
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "sun"
      • Description:

        The name of the young Greek sun god, brother to the moon goddess Selene, who rode across the sky each day in a chariot pulled by four horses.
    • Heliotrope
      • Origin:

        botanical name
      • Description:

        Despite the beauty of this flower's appearance and fragrance, this is one of the clumsier flower names.
    • Hollis
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "near the holly bushes"
      • Description:

        Hollis is a rugged, gentle and quietly used name, given to over 200 boys and 150 girls each year in the US. In 2023, it became one of the newest entries to the US Top 1000, where it fits in with the surnames-as-first-names trend, and other familiar choices like Ellis, Silas, and Holden.
    • Hollis
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "dweller at the holly trees"
      • Description:

        Hollis is a surname-name used quietly for both genders. At last count, it was given to over 200 baby boys and 160 baby girls in the US. Now a Top 1000 name for boys, it could well break into the charts for girls too in the coming years.