The Hoarder's List of Names

  1. Hudson
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "Hugh's son"
    • Description:

      Climbing the charts for boys, and has just begun to cross over for girls, despite the macho "hud" sound followed by the "son" syllable.
  2. Hunter
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "one who hunts"
    • Description:

      Hunter has been dropping a bit for the past few years but is still one of the leaders of a distinctive band of boys' names that combines macho imagery (Hunter, Austin, Harley) with a softened masculinity. Hunter was for years attached to gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson; Josh Holloway used it for his son.
  3. Huxley
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "inhospitable place"
    • Description:

      Huxley is definitely rising as a surname name, with its X that makes almost any name cooler. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2015. The modern nicknames Hux and Huck certainly don't hurt.
  4. ICHABOD
    • Idony
      • Origin:

        Norse
      • Meaning:

        "love again, renewal"
      • Description:

        Idony was the Norse goddess of spring and eternal youth, and variants of her obscure name could come under consideration with the rest of the fashionable I pack.
    • Ignatius
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "fiery"
      • Description:

        Ignatius? Good gracious! This is a name making a truly surprising return, sparked by its selection by not one but two celebrities--Cate Blanchett and Julianne Nicholson.

        Ignatius, the name of several saints including the founder of the Catholic Jesuit order, was considered more apt to be borne by churches and schools than babies in the recent past, though it was not unusual from the late nineteenth century to 1930; it ranked as high as Number 602 in 1913.

    • IGNATIUS
      • Illyria
        • Origin:

          Greek place-name and feminine variation of Illyrius
        • Description:

          Illyria can trace all its varied associations to the name of an ancient place in the western part of the Balkan peninsula, also called Illyricum. Its inhabitants, conquered by the Romans in 168 BC, were called the Illyrians. Its mythological ancestor was Illyrius, a demigod and son of King Cadmus and the goddess Harmonia.
      • Imogen
        • Origin:

          Celtic
        • Meaning:

          "maiden"
        • Description:

          Imogen has long been fashionable in England and is gaining favor in the US among stylish parents. Pronounced the British way — the initial i is short as in Kim, as is the final E as in Ken — Imogen is as pretty and classy as it is distinctive.
      • India
        • Origin:

          Place name, from the River Indus
        • Description:

          Euphonious and long stylish in England, India was one of the fastest-rising names on the 2013 list, after jumping 240 spots back into the Top 1000.
      • Indio
        • Origin:

          Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "Indian"
        • Description:

          This name of a California desert town, used by Deborah Falconer and Robert Downey, Jr. for their son, makes a much livelier and more individual – not to mention more masculine – improvisation on the themes of India and Indiana.
      • Indira
        • Origin:

          Sanskrit
        • Meaning:

          "beauty"
        • Description:

          A striking and feminine possibility associated with a modern hero — longtime Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi.
      • IOLA
        • Iona
          • Origin:

            Scottish place-name
          • Description:

            This name of a small island off the coast of Scotland is trending upwards along with other I names.
        • Ione
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "violet flower"
          • Description:

            This unusual Greek flower and color name has gained considerable recent attention via actress Ione Skye, who is the daughter of sixties folksinger Donovan.
        • Ionna
          • Irie
            • Origin:

              Jamaican
            • Meaning:

              "positive and powerful"
            • Description:

              A name used in the Caribbean, taken from the Rastafarian term that translates best to "positive and powerful." Rastas often greet each other by saying, "Are you feeling Irie today?"
          • Iris
            • Origin:

              Flower name; Greek
            • Meaning:

              "rainbow"
            • Description:

              Iris has so much going for it. It's a fashionable flower name. It's a mythological name, from the Greek goddess of the rainbow. And it's a classic name, always ranking in the girls' Top 1000 but now at its highest point ever.
          • Irissa
            • Isabeau
              • Origin:

                French variation of Isabel
              • Meaning:

                "pledged to God"
              • Description:

                With Isabel getting so popular, parents are searching for new varieties of the name, and Isabeau is one that makes a lovely French twist.