The Hoarder's List of Names

  1. Corin
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "spear"
    • Description:

      Corin was used by Shakespeare in As You Like It, an unusual name that could make a more distinctive alternative to Corey or Colin. It is a name used in the illustrious Redgrave family of actors.
  2. Corinna
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "maiden"
    • Description:

      Delicate and gentle old-fashioned name, the kind found in early English poetry. While Corinna and the original Green Korinna are technically diminutives of the ancient Kore, now the popular Cora, this name will often be mistaken for other similar-sounding though unrelated names, such as Karenna. But it's pretty and is backed by more tradition than you'd guess.
  3. CORINNA
    • Corinne
      • Origin:

        French variation of Greek Korinna
      • Meaning:

        "maiden"
      • Description:

        Corinne is one of the names that, it might surprise you to learn, has never been off the US popularity charts. Its most popular year was 1926, when it ranked Number 249. Corinna is another pretty ancient form of the name, technically a diminutive.
    • Corisande
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "chorus-singer"
      • Description:

        Corisande is a very unusual, haunting choice, with the aura of medieval romance--it is found in early Spanish romantic tales, arriving in the English-speaking world in the nineteenth century.
    • Corissa
      • COSETTE
        • Coy
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "shy, taciturn"
          • Description:

            Though rarely heard now, Coy has been around for a century and was not an uncommon name a hundred years ago. There have been a couple of NFL players named Coy, Coy Bowles is in the Zac Brown band, and of course there was Coy Duke in The Dukes of Hazzard. Due to the flirty connotations of the word "coy", McCoy is a more popular and recommended choice today.
        • Crane
          • Origin:

            English surname
          • Meaning:

            "crane"
          • Description:

            This elegant surname has great potential to turn into an unusual first name, especially with its literary associations to both Stephen and Hart Crane.
        • CRISANTA
          • CRISTIAN
            • Cristobal
              • Origin:

                Spanish variation of Christopher
              • Meaning:

                "bearer of Christ"
              • Description:

                The first name of famed designer Balenciaga, was also the birth name of Christopher Columbus--aka Cristobal Colon. A name still well used in the Hispanic community.
            • Croix
              • Origin:

                French
              • Meaning:

                "cross"
              • Description:

                Pronounced "crwa", this unusual name was chosen by Cedric the Entertainer for his son.
            • Cyrus
              • Origin:

                Persian
              • Meaning:

                "sun"
              • Description:

                Cyrus is one of those surprising names that have always ranked among the Top 1000 boy names in the US. On an upward trend since the mid-90s, Cyrus now sits in that comfortable place between too popular and too unusual.
            • Catalonia
              • Chandlr
                • Daedalus
                  • Origin:

                    Greek
                  • Meaning:

                    "craftsman"
                  • Description:

                    Name of a tragic mythological hero, used as a surname in the works of James Joyce; heavy but ponderous for an American boy, though pulled off very well by single-name musician Daedalus and writer and artist Daedalus Howell.
                • Dagmar
                  • Origin:

                    Norse
                  • Meaning:

                    "Day maiden"
                  • Description:

                    This royal Danish name has long been used across Scandinavia, Germany and Slavic countries and somewhat in the US around the turn of the last century --it was #622 in 1888. There were two notable silent screen stars named Dagmar, one with Polish, the other with Danish roots.
                • Dagny
                  • Origin:

                    Scandinavian
                  • Meaning:

                    "new day"
                  • Description:

                    If you're looking for a name with Scandinavian roots, this would make a stronger and more appealing import than Dagmar. With its meaning of "new day," it could make an ideal choice for a girl born around New Year's.
                • Dago