I myself am strange and unusual

  1. Eris
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "strife, discord"
    • Description:

      Eris was the goddess of strife and discord, turned fairy tale and then popular culture figure Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty. Ironic, as her name sounds so much like that of Eros, the god of love.
  2. Elissabet
    • Emeli
      • Fable
        • Origin:

          English word name
        • Meaning:

          "a legendary story of supernatural happenings"
        • Description:

          Fable, like Story, is a word name with real potential, combining enchanted tale-telling with a moral edge. And soundwise, it would fit right in with the likes of Abel and Mabel.
      • Galileo
        • Origin:

          Italian
        • Meaning:

          "from Galilee"
        • Description:

          The name of the great Renaissance astronomer and mathematician would make a distinctive hero-middle-name for the son of parents involved in those fields.
      • Hester
        • Origin:

          Medieval variation of Esther, Persian
        • Meaning:

          "star"
        • Description:

          The disgraced heroine of The Scarlet Letter's name, after long neglect, just might have a chance at revival, following in the wake of sister-name Esther. We've characterized her elsewhere as an eccentric aristocrat, much more accepted in the U.K. than she has been here.
      • Horatio
        • Origin:

          English variation of Latin Horatius
        • Meaning:

          "hour, time"
        • Description:

          Like Horace, Horatio is a variation on the Latin Horatius, but its Shakespearean and optimistic Horatio Alger pedigree makes it an attractive up-and-comer, especially with its cool final o. A modern reference is the charismatic TV character Horatio Caine played by David Caruso in CSI: Miami.
      • Hecate
        • Hesper
          • Isidore
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "gift of Isis"
            • Description:

              Isabel and Isadora are back: could it now be time for a more widespread revival of Isidore? In 2014, both Isidore and Isadore were on the list of fastest-rising names in the US.
          • Isobel
            • Origin:

              Scottish variation of Isabel
            • Meaning:

              "pledged to God"
            • Description:

              The Scottish spelling of Isabel has a definite character of her own, the 'o' giving her an extra infusion of strength but also an element of confusion. How do you pronounce that? Answer: Exactly like Isabel or Isabelle.
          • Ismeria
            • Ismérie
              • Julian
                • Origin:

                  English from Latin, variation of Julius
                • Meaning:

                  "youthful, downy-bearded, or sky father"
                • Description:

                  Cool and charming, with plenty of flair and sophistication, Julian manages to strike the balance between being a sensible classic and contemporary choice. Appealingly international, it is no wonder Julian is a rising star.
              • Junia
                • Origin:

                  Latin, Feminine variation of Junius
                • Meaning:

                  "born in June"
                • Description:

                  Juno is hot, June is showing signs of a comeback along with other month and day names, whereas Junia, the name of the the first century Christian referred to by the apostle Paul as an apostle (and who may have been male), is yet to be discovered.
              • Keats
                • Origin:

                  English literary name
                • Meaning:

                  "kite"
                • Description:

                  Poetic and easier to pronounce (it's keets) than Yeats (which is yates). This one of many poets' names to consider, such as Auden, Eliot, Frost, Byron, Lorca, Marlowe, Blake, Emerson and Tennyson, which was used by Russell Crowe.
              • Keira
                • Origin:

                  Irish
                • Meaning:

                  "little dark one"
                • Description:

                  Keira is an attractive girls’ name that's gotten a huge boost from the meteoric rise of Keira Knightley. Original spelling Kiera, which relates more directly to the male Kieran, was the more popular form until the rise of Keira Knightley reversed the order. Both are Anglicized versions of the Irish Ciara.
              • Kira
                • Origin:

                  Russian feminine variation of Cyrus
                • Meaning:

                  "throne"
                • Description:

                  Though such cognates of Kira as Keira, Kyra, and Ciara are increasingly popular throughout Europe and in the U.S., this Cyrus relative has a different root. As with all the many variations of this appealing name, there is often confusion around spelling and pronunciation -- does the first syllable rhyme with ear or eye?
              • Lazarus
                • Origin:

                  Latinized Greek variation of Hebrew Eleazar
                • Meaning:

                  "God is my helper"
                • Description:

                  Lazarus is a name that looks as if it could possibly be raised from the dead, just like its biblical bearer. Look for it in the next wave of Old Testament revivals that transcend their long-bearded images, the way Noah, Moses, and Abraham have for this generation.
              • Lenore
                • Origin:

                  German variation of Leonora, Italian derivative of Eleonora, meaning unknown
                • Description:

                  A "modernization" of Leonora that has suddenly come back on the radar along with the many other Leo names--both male and female. With literary cred via a famous eponymous poem by Edgar Allan Poe (and also in his even more famous The Raven,) Lenore was steadily in the top half of the popularity list until the mid-fifties, falling off in 1973. Cameron Diaz played a Lenore in The Green Hornet.