Interesting Names - For Consideration

  1. Marigold
    • Origin:

      Flower name, from English
    • Meaning:

      "golden flower"
    • Description:

      Marigold, once found almost exclusively in English novels and aristocratic nurseries, is beginning to be talked about and considered here. It has a sweet, sunny, quirky feel. The marigold was the symbol of the Virgin Mary.
  2. Mayhew
    • Mercer
      • Origin:

        French occupational surname
      • Meaning:

        "a merchant"
      • Description:

        Mercer is one fashionable occupational name that can work as well for girls as boys, perhaps because of the soft c or the conventionally feminine nickname Mercy.
    • Micah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "who is like the Lord"
      • Description:

        The bright, playful Micah feels like the middle ground between the safe, solid qualities of Michael and the flair and energy of Luca. Both Biblical and stylish, Micah is proving popular among parents today.
    • Oceane
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "ocean"
      • Description:

        Oceane (oh-see-EN) has been one of the chicest names in France for several years, ranking in the French Top 50. This is a sophisticated name that could easily cross the ocean, and is much more stylish than the English Ocean or Oceana.
    • Odessa
      • Origin:

        Ukrainian place-name
      • Description:

        Odessa, a Ukrainian port city, was given its name by Catherine the Great, who was inspired by Homer's Odyssey. It would make an original and intriguing choice.
    • Odette
      • Origin:

        French, from German
      • Meaning:

        "wealthy"
      • Description:

        Odette is the good swan in Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake, a role for which Natalie Portman won an Oscar ---and it would make a particularly soigne, sophisticated yet upbeat choice, unlike some of the more dated other 'ette'-ending names.
    • Plum
      • Origin:

        Fruit name
      • Description:

        British-born novelist Plum Sykes has taken this rich, fruity name out of the produce section and put it into the baby name basket. It's more appealing than Apple, more presentable than Peaches. The French equivalent, Prune, is very fashionable there but would not fly with English speakers.
    • Quigley
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "from the mother's side"
      • Description:

        The spoiled only son of the richest family in town in a fifties movie.
    • Quincy
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "estate of the fifth son"
      • Description:

        Quirky in the way that all Q names are quirky, Quincy was once a buttoned-up, patrician New England name, an image countered in recent years by the talented and ultracool musician Quincy Jones (middle name: Delight; nickname: Q).
    • Rhys
      • Origin:

        Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "ardor"
      • Description:

        There's Rhys and there's Reese (now more popular for girls) and there's Reece, and we particularly like the traditional Welsh spelling, which entered the list in 2004, possibly influenced by Jonathan Rhys Meyers, of The Tudors, and Welsh-born actor Rhys Ifans.
    • Rosamund
      • Origin:

        German
      • Meaning:

        "horse protection"
      • Description:

        This lovely, quintessentially British appellation, also spelled Rosamond, is the name of a legendary twelfth-century beauty. Rare on these shores, it is more than worthy of importation.
    • Sage
      • Origin:

        Herb name; Latin
      • Meaning:

        "wise"
      • Description:

        Sage is an evocatively fragrant herbal name that also connotes wisdom, giving it a double advantage. It entered the Top 1000 at about the same time for both genders in the early 1990s, but it has pulled ahead for the girls. Toni Collette named her daughter Sage Florence.
    • Savannah
      • Origin:

        Spanish
      • Meaning:

        "flat tropical grassland"
      • Description:

        A place name with a deep Southern accent, the once-obscure Savannah shot to fame, with others of its genre, on the heels of the best seller Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which was set in the mossy Georgia city of Savannah. Originally a substitute for the overused Samantha, Savannah is now becoming overused itself, long among the top girls' names starting with S.
    • Sloane
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "raider"
      • Description:

        Sloane is a sleek, sophisticated surname name that has gradually morphed over to the girls' side. With its distinctive and intriguing sound, Sloane has been in the US Top 1000 since 2009, and in 2022, it made its first appearance in the UK charts, jumping more than 400 places in a single year.
    • Temperance
      • Origin:

        Virtue name
      • Description:

        Not too long ago, Temperance was found only on lists of Puritan baby names.
    • Thomasin
      • Origin:

        English, feminine variation of Thomas
      • Description:

        Pre-Thomasina female form of Thomas, now seen as more literary and upscale British. In Thomas Hardy's novel The Return of the Native, a leading character is Thomasin Yeobright.
    • Ulysses
      • Origin:

        Latin variation of the Greek Odysseus
      • Description:

        Ulysses is one of the few U boys' names anyone knows -- with heavy links to the Homeric hero, eighteenth president Grant, and the James Joyce novel -- all of which makes it both distinguished and kind of weighty for a modern boy. Ulysses was on the US popularity list well into the twenty-first century; it's off now, but Number 684 on Nameberry.
    • Waverly
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "meadow of quivering aspens"
      • Description:

        Waverly, with its literary resonance and lilting three-syllable sound, could well become the next generation's successor to Kimberly. Its upper-crusty surname feel places it among the new stylish English names for girls, successors to Ashley and Whitney.
    • Xanthe
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "golden, yellow"
      • Description:

        X marks the spot in names these days, usually at the middles or ends of names, but here is one that puts it squarely up front.