Francophile Naming Guide –– Biblical Names for Boys and Girls

  1. Olympe
    • Origin:

      French variation of Olympia
  2. Orpa
    • Ozias
      • Origin:

        Greek, Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "my strength is God"
      • Description:

        A cool Biblical option that currently sits just outside the US Top 1000, Ozias gets extra points for its user-friendly nicknames Oz and Ozzie. Given to around 200 boys in 2023, it has quadrupled in use since 2013.

        Deriving from the Hebrew Uzziah, Ozias is the name of several minor figures in the Greek and Latin Bible, most notably the king of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. It also has a literary connection in the form of the wonderfully named Ozias Midwinter from Wilkie Collins' 19th century sensationalist novel Armadale. Several characters in the novel describe the name as 'horrible', claiming that 'no sane human being would assume such a name as Ozias', but we - and a growing number of parents - would disagree.
    • Obal
      • Oholibama
        • Onésime
          • Onésiphore
            • Ophir
              • Osée
                • Paul
                  • Origin:

                    Latin
                  • Meaning:

                    "small"
                  • Description:

                    To the thousands of girls who screamed the name of their favorite Beatle in the 1960s, the boys' name Paul had a thrillingly unique image, but to the rest of the world, then and now, it's a name that's so simple and yet so widely diffuse that it could belong to almost anyone. Paul is an ancient name for boys -- popular in Roman and medieval times -- that's not very fashionable now, which can work in its favor, scarcity balancing simplicity.
                • Peninna
                  • Philippe
                    • Origin:

                      French variation of Philip
                    • Meaning:

                      "lover of horses"
                    • Description:

                      Philippe, pronounced fill-EEP, is Philip with Gallic flair.
                  • Pierre
                    • Origin:

                      French variation of Peter
                    • Meaning:

                      "rock, stone"
                    • Description:

                      One of the most familiar — if not stereotypical — Gallic names. Pierre was a Top 5 name in France from the 19th century through 1940 and is now on a steady decline in its native land. In the US, Pierre was most common in the 1980s but it has never cracked the Top 300.
                  • Prisca
                    • Origin:

                      Latin
                    • Meaning:

                      "ancient"
                    • Description:

                      The rarer long form of Priscilla, which comes from the Roman name Priscus, meaning "ancient".
                  • Priscille
                    • Pua
                      • Origin:

                        Hawaiian
                      • Meaning:

                        "flower"
                      • Description:

                        Overly teasable.
                    • Pachath Moab
                      • Pareosch
                        • Parmaschtha
                          • Parménas