Unusual girl names

  1. Lorelei
    • Origin:

      German
    • Meaning:

      "alluring, temptress"
    • Description:

      The lovely Lorelei, a name from old German legend, was a beautiful Rhine River seductress whose haunting voice led sailors to hazardous rocks that would cause them to be shipwrecked. And this siren image clung to the name for ages.
  2. Lorena
    • Origin:

      Spanish variation of Lorraine
    • Meaning:

      "from the province of Lorraine"
    • Description:

      A feminine name heard most often in the Hispanic community. Surprisingly, Lorena was on the US Top 1000 list of girls' names for an impressive 130 years, from 1880 until falling off in 2011. We do not predict an imminent return.
  3. Lorna
    • Origin:

      English literary name
    • Description:

      One of those names like Pamela, Vanessa and Wendy, Lorna was invented for a particular literary character--the protagonist of the 1869 novel Lorna Doone by R. D. Blackmore--and then perpetuated as the name of a shortbread cookie. The author claimed to have based it on the Scottish place-name, Lorn. In baby name limbo for quite some time, it was chosen by Judy Garland for her younger daughter, Lorna Luft. Lorna Simpson is an important contemporary American artist.
  4. Malaika
    • Marcelina
      • 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.
      • Marlana
        • Marlene
          • Origin:

            German variation of Madeline; combination of Mary and Magdalen
          • Description:

            Marlene Dietrich made it famous when she condensed her first two names, Maria and Magdalena. Now more often pronounced with two syllables rather than three.
        • Maryana
          • Origin:

            English, combination of Mary and Ana
          • Meaning:

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

            Variant of Marianna
        • Maureen
          • Origin:

            Irish variation of Mary
          • Description:

            Almost as popular in the 1950s among the Irish in Boston as it was with those back in Bray, Maureen was once among the most prominent Irish names for girls in the US but has fallen from favor along with most of her een-ending sisters such as Eileen and Colleen.
        • 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.
        • Merida
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "one who has achieved a high place of honor"
          • Description:

            You'll probably be hearing more of this name thanks to the newest Pixar film, featuring Princess Merida, the first Pixar princess--a feisty, athletic, independent medieval Scottish girl with wild red hair. Her name, however, is not Scottish, but a Spanish place name found in both Spain and Mexico's Yucatan peninsula.
        • Nastassja
          • Oriana
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "dawn"
            • Description:

              Oriana is a dashing medieval name, with a meaning similar to Aurora. At this point, though, Oriana is much more unusual than Aurora and makes a unique choice if you're searching for names that mean new beginnings or dawn.
          • Pandora
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "all gifted"
            • Description:

              Pandora has occasionally been used by the British gentry (for girls with brothers who might be called Peregrine) and is now starting to be heard in the US too: It was given to 34 baby girls last year.
          • Philippa
            • Origin:

              Greek, feminine variation of Philip
            • Meaning:

              "lover of horses"
            • Description:

              Philippa is a prime example of a boy's name adapted for girls that was common as crumpets in Cornwall, but rarely heard stateside. That was before the advent of royal sister-in-law Philippa Middleton, who goes by the lively nickname Pippa.
          • Pola
            • Origin:

              Short form of Amapola, Arabic
            • Meaning:

              "poppy"
            • Description:

              Pola is an international name that still bears the femme fatalish air of Polish-born silent screen vamp Pola Negri, whole birth name was Apolonia. Rarely used, she could join sisters Lola and Nola.
          • Pheline
            • Proserpina
              • Rhianon