stand out girls names

  1. Leandra
    • Origin:

      Feminine variation of Leander, Greek
    • Meaning:

      "lion-man"
    • Description:

      With the rise of many once-dated leonine names, from Leona to Lionel to Leonora, Leandra is an unusual choice that might be looking at a comeback..
  2. 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.
  3. Leona
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "lioness"
    • Description:

      A Top 100 name from 1896 to 1921, Leona reached as high as Number 72. Since then, Leona had seemed to be one of the most unfashionable of the pride of lion names, but singer Leona Lewis has done a lot to rejuvenate it. Leona returned to the Top 1000 in 2009 after decades of being away.
  4. Leora
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Eleanor, or Hebrew and Greek
    • Meaning:

      "light"
    • Description:

      Somewhat dated Hebrew name that appears more modern when spelled Liora.
  5. Loralle
    • 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.
    • Luella
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Louella
      • Meaning:

        "battle famous fairy maiden"
      • Description:

        Luella is a sleeker spelling variant of the girls' name Louella and is now more popular than the original. Sweet, but lively, it was a popular name in the the early 19th century, but fell out of favor in the 50s. Now, after a 60 year absence, it's back in the charts, in the US and the UK.
    • Leonella
      • Meribel
        • Misty
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "mist"
          • Description:

            The Play Misty for Me jokes will get old really fast.
        • Nanette
          • Origin:

            French diminutive of Anne
          • Meaning:

            "grace"
          • Description:

            There was a time when French names like Annette, Paulette – and Nanette – were chic, but now, we'd have to say "No, no, Nanette".
        • Nelle
          • Origin:

            Spelling variation of Nell
          • Description:

            Nelle, pronounced as the one-syllable Nell though some may think it's Nellie or Nella, is the elegant form of the name used by author Nelle Harper Lee, who wrote To Kill A Mockingbird. With whatever spelling, Nell/Nelle is a charming old-fashioned nickname name -- it was originally short for Ellen, Eleanor, or Helen -- that never took off the way sisters Molly and Maggie did.
        • Norah
          • Origin:

            English, Arabic
          • Meaning:

            "woman of honor, light"
          • Description:

            The skyrocketing success of singer Norah Jones brought this spelling of the name onto the pop charts in 2003. As well as being a spelling variant of Nora in English, it's also an alternative transcription of the Arabic name Nura, from Nur/Noor "light".
        • Nouvel
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "new"
          • Description:

            Shot to fame as the middle name of Brangelina's daughter Shiloh Nouvel, after French architect Jean Nouvel.
        • Novella
          • Persephone
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "bringer of destruction"
            • Description:

              Persephone is the esoteric name of the Greek mythological daughter of Zeus by Demeter, the queen of the harvest. After she was kidnapped by Hades to be Queen of the Underworld, it was decreed by Zeus that she would spend six months of the year with her mother, allowing crops to grow, and six in mourning, thus accounting for the seasons.
          • Primrose
            • Origin:

              English flower name
            • Meaning:

              "first rose"
            • Description:

              A quaint and quirky flower name, until recently considered a bit too prim for most American classrooms but brought back to life in recent years by the attractive character of Primrose "Prim" Everdeen in the Hunger Games series. In the Top 300 girl names in England and Wales and on Nameberry, Primrose remains rare in the US, but is made more accessible by a raft of sweet nickname options, including Rosie and Posy.
          • Pemberly
            • Reine
              • Origin:

                French
              • Meaning:

                "queen"
              • Description:

                This regal French name is a descendant of the Latin Regina, as is the Spanish Reina. Reine is also a male name in Scandinavia.
            • Rosalie
              • Origin:

                French variation of Latin Rosalia
              • Meaning:

                "rose"
              • Description:

                Rosalie hit its apex in 1938 and then slid straight downhill until it fell off the U.S. Top 1000 completely in the 1980s, only to spring back to life in 2009 as the name of a character in the Twilight series. The beautiful vampire Rosalie Hale has breathed fresh life back into this mid-century name, and the fact that the character is both sympathetic and relatively minor means Rosalie has the chance to thrive again as a baby name without feeling unduly tied to Twilight.