Quirky Cemetery Names

  1. Clarinda
    • Origin:

      Literary elaboration of Clara
    • Meaning:

      "bright, clear"
    • Description:

      A poetic name first used in Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene" in 1596, it had a literary vogue in the 18th century, especially favored by Robert Burns. "inda" names--Melinda, Belinda, Linda" are not particularly in right now.
  2. Connell
    • Climena
      • Clymena
        • Dolphus
          • Danforth
            • Dionysia
              • Elbridge
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "old bridge"
                • Description:

                  Elbridge is an uncommon last name used as first. It sounds rather forbidding, but Bridge would be a cute, modern nickname.
              • Elden
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "noble friend"
                • Description:

                  This old-fashioned name looks like it could be on the edge of a revival, following in the footsteps of Alden and Auden.
              • Elder
                • Origin:

                  English word name
                • Description:

                  Anyone who's seen "The Book of Mormon" or visited Utah knows this as the title taken by male Mormon missionaries during their term of service. We'd advise anyone who lives somewhere with any significant Mormon population to avoid it for that reason.
              • Eliphalet
                • Origin:

                  Hebrew
                • Meaning:

                  "God has judged"
                • Description:

                  A bit too elephantine for a modern child.
              • Emerson
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "son of Emery"
                • Description:

                  Emerson is a dignified, somewhat serious name associated with transcendental thinker Ralph Waldo Emerson. Much more popular now for girls since Desperate Housewife Teri Hatcher used it for her daughter, it is definitely still a viable boys name.
              • Fidelia
                • Origin:

                  Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "faithful"
                • Description:

                  Fidelia stems from the Latin word Fides, meaning faith. It has the some root as the English word fidelity. Fidelia gained popularity in the mid-19th Century after Beethoven's opera "Fidelio" gave this name cultural and virtuous significance.
              • Gorham
                • Hulda
                  • Origin:

                    Hebrew
                  • Meaning:

                    "sweet, lovable"
                  • Description:

                    Hilda with a stuffed nose.
                • Hastings
                  • Hayford
                    • Ianthia
                      • Iney
                        • Lenora
                          • Origin:

                            English, contracted form of Leonora
                          • Meaning:

                            "light"
                          • Description:

                            A lovely (and uncommon) longer form for Nora, one of the most fashionable international nickname names around. Lenora fell off the US charts in the 70s, but just re-entered in 2022 as parents' love for short forms Leni and Nora is growing.