A - Z All My Favorite Names

  1. Perpetua
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "perpetual"
    • Description:

      A 3rd century saint's name sometimes used in Catholic communities, and in Western European countries like Portugal and Italy.
  2. 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.
  3. Petal
    • Origin:

      English from Greek
    • Meaning:

      "leaf"
    • Description:

      Petal is the soft and sweet-smelling name of a character in the novel and film, The Shipping News. With the rise of such flower names as Poppy and Posy, we believe Petal — down-to-earth yet romantic — has its own appealingly distinctive style.
  4. Philosophy
    • Origin:

      Word name
    • Description:

      Far-fetched, but friends can always call him Phil.
  5. Phoenix
    • Origin:

      Arizona place name and Greek
    • Meaning:

      "dark red"
    • Description:

      Phoenix is a New Age name symbolizing rebirth and immortality. It's also a place name, a color name, a mythological name, AND an animal name, combining several of today's hottest trends in one appealing package.
  6. Phoenix
    • Origin:

      Arizona place-name and Greek
    • Meaning:

      "dark red"
    • Description:

      Effortlessly cool with a hint of the mystical, Phoenix rolls a lot of trends into one: it's a place-name and a bird name, it ends in the stylish letter x, it's got in-built nicknames, and it's unisex too. Familiar but not over-popular, Phoenix ranks in the US and UK Top 1000s.
  7. Piano
    • Pierce
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "son of Piers"
      • Description:

        Actor Pierce Brosnan brings a strong helping of charm to this name. Pierce was actually a popular name long before Mr. Brosnan came along, from 1880 to the end of the 1930s.
    • Pilot
      • Origin:

        Occupational name
      • Description:

        One celebrity baby Pilot put this occupational choice into the pool -- together with the middle name Inspektor, something we wouldn't advise following.
    • Pine
      • Origin:

        Nature name
      • Description:

        Worthy sibling for Oak, Elm, Juniper, and Spruce.
    • 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.
    • Poesy
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Meaning:

        "poetry"
      • Description:

        This old-fashioned word for poetry has some antiquated charm but doesn't exactly roll off the tongue.
    • Poet
      • Origin:

        English word name
      • Description:

        A recently entered name on the roster, Poet was used for her daughter by Soleil Moon (Punky Brewster) Frye, who obviously appreciates the advantages of an unusual name. This is a possible middle name choice for verse-loving parents who want to skip specifics like Auden or Poe or Keats or Tennyson and go with the generic.
    • Poppy
      • Origin:

        English from Latin
      • Meaning:

        "red flower"
      • Description:

        Poppy, unlike most floral names which are sweet and feminine, has a lot of spunk. Long popular throughout the rest of the English-speaking world, Poppy is finally starting to rise toward the top in the US, where it entered the Top 1000 for the first time in 2016.
    • Posey
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "a bunch of flowers"
      • Description:

        Posey is fashionable in England, a country of gardeners, but this pretty bouquet-of-flowers name is only starting to be heard here.
    • Prairie
      • Origin:

        English nature name
      • Meaning:

        "prairie"
      • Description:

        Unspecific place name with a wonderfully wide-open, spacious, western feel; used for a character in Thomas Pynchon's novel Vineland.
    • Primavera
      • Origin:

        Italian
      • Meaning:

        "spring"
      • Description:

        A bit syllable-heavy, but a pretty name for a springtime baby.
    • 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.
    • Prince
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "chief, prince"
      • Description:

        Prince rose to its highest ranking in a century in 2015, and the tragic death of its most famous bearer in April 2016 propelled it even higher. The Purple Rain legend isn't its only tie to pop royalty: Michael Jackson chose it for not one but two of his sons. Royal names such as King and Prince, once thought of as canine, have begun to be used by human non-royals for their sons.
    • Priscilla
      • Origin:

        Latin, diminutive of Prisca
      • Meaning:

        "ancient"
      • Description:

        Despite her somewhat prissy, puritanical air, Priscilla has managed to stay widely used for well over a century -- it reached as high as Number 127 in 1940 -- appreciated for its delicacy and solid history.