Girls' Names

  1. Laine
    • Origin:

      Variation of Elaine
    • Meaning:

      "bright, shining light"
    • Description:

      Lainey is one of the many fast-rising nickname names of the last few years, and longer forms like Elaine, Alaina, and Delaney are enjoying their own bouts of popularity. Simple and tailored, but equally sweet Laine is not yet in the Top 1000, but feels stylish today.
  2. Lanae
    • Lane
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "a small roadway or path"
      • Description:

        Lane is a unisex name equally accessible to boys and girls. As a common surname, Lane is attached to such celebrities as Diane and Nathan.
    • Laurel
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "laurel tree"
      • Description:

        Laurel takes Laura back to its meaning in nature, resulting in a gentle, botanical option. Even more directly than Laura, Laurel relates back to the laurel wreath signifying success and peace in ancient Greece and Rome.
    • Lauret
      • Leanor
        • Leigh
          • Origin:

            English variation of Lee
          • Meaning:

            "pasture, meadow"
          • Description:

            This spelling adds a little more femininity to the neutral Lee. Leigh and sister Lee were quite popular in the 1960s and 1970s among the first cool wave of unisex names for girls, but now have vanished from the Top 1000. The Biblical Leah is preferred.
        • 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.
        • Leonor
          • Origin:

            Spanish and Portuguese variation of Eleanor, English, meaning unknown
          • Description:

            This streamlined variation of Eleanor is common in Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries, particularly Portugal itself, where it has ranked among the Top 3 baby girl names for over a decade.
        • Liberty
          • Origin:

            Word name
          • Description:

            Less common than other virtue names, Liberty is nonetheless a name with a long American heritage.
        • Liesel
          • Lilla
            • Origin:

              Italian
            • Meaning:

              "lilac"
            • Description:

              An underused member of the Lily group of names. The spelling makes it clear you want it to rhyme with Willa.
          • Lillian
            • Origin:

              English from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "lily; pledged to God"
            • Description:

              Lillian has ranked among the US Top 50 for the past 20 years, making it Lily's less popular but more grownup cousin.
          • Linden
            • Origin:

              English tree name
            • Meaning:

              "tree of the genus Tilla"
            • Description:

              Though this name of a sturdy tree that can live for centuries was quite popular for boys in the first half of the twentieth century, at this point in time we can see Linden as a fresh-sounding possibility for a little girl named to honor an Aunt Linda. Early pagans and Christians embraced the Linden as a holy tree, thought to aid healing and often planted near churches. The Linden is the mythological symbol of truth, peace, and justice; court cases and marriage ceremonies were often held beneath Linden trees. The Linden tree is associated with the goddess Freya.
          • Linnea
            • Origin:

              Swedish
            • Meaning:

              "twinflower, lime tree"
            • Description:

              Linnea is an attractive Scandinavian name that derives from the renowned 18th century Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus, who developed the Linnean system of classifying plants and animals.
          • Linnet
            • Origin:

              French
            • Meaning:

              "flaxen haired"
            • Description:

              Although the accent in Linnet is on the first syllable, it could be confused with the dated Lynette.
          • Liorit
            • Lisabet
              • Lisbet
                • Lisette
                  • Origin:

                    French, diminutive of Elizabeth or Lise
                  • Meaning:

                    "pledged to God"
                  • Description:

                    Lisette, also spelled Lizette, is a dainty,, if somewhat dated, Gallic offshoot of Elizabeth. It reached its U.S. peak of popularity in 1999, then fell off the list in 2001.