The Hoarder's List of Names

  1. Marek
    • Origin:

      Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovak variation of Mark, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "warlike"
    • Description:

      A wearable update to the New Testament classic.
  2. Maren
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "sea"
    • Description:

      Maren is one of the many twenty-first-century takes on Mary--but we find the more classic Marin spelling preferable. When spelled Maren, the pronunciation seems more clearly to resemble Mary, with the emphasis on the first syllable. Marin, the spelling also used for the beautiful coastal county north of San Francisco, is often pronounced with the emphasis on the second syllable, as in Marie.
  3. MAREN
    • Marian
      • Origin:

        French medieval variation of Marie
      • Meaning:

        "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
      • Description:

        Marian's (and sister spelling Marion's) image has gone through a sea change of late, recalling less middle-aged matron and more Robin Hood's romantic Maid Marian. Some influences: the SJ Parker-M. Broderick twin daughter Marion and the glamorous French actress Marion Cotillard.
    • MARIANNA
      • Mariella
        • Origin:

          Italian and Dutch diminutive of Maria
        • Meaning:

          "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
        • Description:

          Lilting and nearly unknown here, with the currently popular ella ending, makes a good Marissa alternative.
      • Marietta
        • Origin:

          Italian diminutive of Maria
        • Meaning:

          "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
        • Description:

          Marietta would make for a classy and uncommon long form for cool nickname Etta.
      • Marion
        • Origin:

          French derivative of Mary
        • Meaning:

          "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
        • Description:

          Fun fact: Marion was the birth name of movie star John Wayne. Although commonly thought of as a female name today, it was actually more popular for boys until the late 19th century, and was given to roughly equal numbers of boys and girls throughout the 1970s-2000s.
      • MARIS
        • Marjorie
          • Origin:

            Scottish variation of Margery, diminutive of Margaret
          • Meaning:

            "pearl"
          • Description:

            Scottish Marjorie and her English twin Margery were early twentieth century favorites that date back to medieval times, when it was popular among the royals. They were at their height in the 1920s, when they were seen as more lively versions of the old standard. Marjorie was always the preferred spelling, in the Top 25 from 1920 to 1927.
        • MARJORIE
          • Marlowe
            • Origin:

              Variation of Marlow, English
            • Meaning:

              "driftwood"
            • Description:

              Is it Marlo, Marlow, or Marlowe? Suddenly they all seem very much in the air, in tune with rhyming cousins Harlow and Arlo. It all started when Margaret Julia Thomas began being known as Marlo (after being previously nicknamed Margie and Marlow). More recently, Jason Schwartzman used the e-ending version for his young daughter, Marlowe Rivers, as did Sienna Miller for her baby girl Marlowe Ottoline.
          • Maryam
            • Origin:

              Arabic, Persian, and Urdu variant of Mary, Hebrew
            • Meaning:

              "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
            • Description:

              Classic Mary has many international variations and the strong, pretty Maryam is the Arabic, Persian, and Urdu form. Popular in many countries across the world, from Azerbaijan to France, The Netherlands to Iran and from England to Russia, Maryam is the form of Mary that appears in the Quran.
          • MATEO
            • Mathieu
              • Matisse
                • Origin:

                  Art name
                • Description:

                  The surname of the great artist is pronounced the same way as Mathis, the German and French form of Matthew, so it's not a stretch for use as a first name.
              • Matteo
                • Origin:

                  Italian
                • Meaning:

                  "gift of God"
                • Description:

                  This attractively energetic Italian version of the classic Matthew is primed to move further and further into mainstream American nomenclature. Mateo is technically the Spanish version, but many parents in the US use the two spellings interchangeably.
              • Maude
                • Origin:

                  English and French diminutive of Matilda, German
                • Meaning:

                  "battle-mighty"
                • Description:

                  Maude, also spelled Maud, is a lacy, mauve-tinted name that was wildly popular a hundred years ago, but has been rarely heard in the past fifty. Some stylish parents are starting to choose it again, especially as a middle.
              • Maverick
                • Origin:

                  American
                • Meaning:

                  "independent, nonconformist"
                • Description:

                  It's ironic that the name Maverick is not such a maverick anymore. Heard first in a 1950s James Garner western TV series, and then as the Tom Cruise character in Top Gun, Maverick symbolizes an unfettered, free spirit.
              • Mavis
                • Origin:

                  French
                • Meaning:

                  "songbird"
                • Description:

                  Mavis, another word for the song thrush, is also a relative of the Welsh word for strawberries, mefus. Mavis has something of a British World War II feel, a friend of Beryl and Doris, but it was quite popular in the U.S. a couple of decades earlier, peaking in the Roaring Twenties. With the renewed interest in names ending in 's' — and in bird names — Mavis could make a return, especially with the new interest in Maeve, and in fact, it reentered the US Top 1000 after a 50-year absence in 2016.