Gothic Names for Girls

  1. Florentine
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "flowering; flourishing; from Florence"
    • Description:

      Florentine is an unusual member of a group of names destined for great popularity for girls. Its primary members are Flora and Florence, but rarer choices such as Flory and Fleur and Florentine are sure to flower in the years ahead.
  2. Foxglove
    • Origin:

      Flower name, from English
    • Meaning:

      "fox's glove"
    • Description:

      A rare flower name that works as well for boys as it does for girls, so named because of its resemblance to a small glove.
  3. Feronia
    • Guinevere
      • Origin:

        Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "white shadow, white wave"
      • Description:

        Guinevere was the name of the beautiful but ill-fated queen of Camelot, for so many years eclipsed by its modern Cornish form Jennifer. Today, Guinevere could be a cool possibility for adventurous parents intrigued by this richly evocative and romantic choice.
    • Gwendoline
      • Origin:

        Variation of Gwendolen, Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "white ring"
      • Description:

        The Gwendoline form may introduce pronunciation confusion -- does that last syllable rhyme with wine or win or when? We vote Gwendolen as not only the most proper but the clearest spelling, followed by Gwendolyn, with Gwendoline a distant third.
    • Gwendydd
      • Hazelle
        • Hellebore
          • Origin:

            Greek, English
          • Meaning:

            "plant eaten by fawns"
          • Description:

            A beautiful plant and a rare botanical name probably deriving from Greek. Could make a novel honor middle for an ancestral Helen.
        • Hesperia
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "evening, evening star"
          • Description:

            Hesperia is the name of one of the Hesperides, known as the daughters of Hesperus or evening. Hesperus is the personification of the evening star in Greek mythology, better known as Venus in Roman mythology. Variations include Hesper and Hespera.
        • Isolde
          • Origin:

            Welsh, German
          • Meaning:

            "ice ruler"
          • Description:

            Now that Tristan has been rediscovered, maybe it's time for his fabled lover in the Arthurian romances and Wagnerian opera, a beautiful Irish princess, to be brought back into the light as well.
        • Ivy
          • Origin:

            Botanical name
          • Description:

            The quirky, offbeat and energetic botanical name Ivy is enjoying a deserved revival, propelled even higher by its choice by high-profile parents Beyonce and Jay-Z for daughter Blue Ivy. Ivy is also traditionally used at Christmas, make this one of the perfect names for December babies.
        • Ianira
          • Isolabella
            • Jenessa
              • Origin:

                Modern invented name
              • Description:

                This newer sounding coalition of Jennifer and Vanessa is gaining in popularity.
            • Juliet
              • Origin:

                English from Latin
              • Meaning:

                "youthful or sky father"
              • Description:

                One of the most romantic names, the lovely and stylish Juliet seems finally to have shaken off her limiting link to Romeo. In Shakespeare's play, it was Juliet who said "What's in a name?"
            • Joliette
              • Ketura
                • Khalida
                  • Origin:

                    Arabic
                  • Meaning:

                    "immortal, everlasting"
                  • Description:

                    Khalida is an evocative Middle Eastern choice. Its male counterpart, Khalid, recently returned to the US Top 1000.
                • Kiara
                  • Origin:

                    Variation of the Italian Chiara or the Irish Ciara or Aboriginal Australian, Korean
                  • Meaning:

                    "light, clear; little dark one; cockatoo; first ray of sun"
                  • Description:

                    Kiara can be considered a variation of both the Italian name Chiara and the Irish name Ciara. Chiara is the Italian form of Clara, meaning "bright" or "clear," while Ciara is the feminine form of male given name Ciar, derived from the old Irish cíar, meaning "dark."
                • Kavindra