Wacky & Wonder full

  1. Kingsmark
    • Kristobell
      • Lazuli
        • Monet
          • Orla
            • Origin:

              Irish
            • Meaning:

              "golden princess"
            • Description:

              Orla is an Irish name closely associated with the high king Brian Boru, as it was the name of his sister, daughter and niece. It was very popular in the Middle Ages – the fourth most popular name in twelfth century Ireland – and has become popular again in Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales today. In Irish, the name is commonly spelled Orlaith or Orlagh.
          • Oasis
            • Reverie
              • Origin:

                Word name
              • Description:

                Reverie is a strong-sounding word for an ethereal, dreamlike state -- a perfect contrast and meaning for a word that intends to become a first name. Popular mommy blogger Rebecca Woolf of Girls Gone Child named one of her twin daughters Reverie, setting off a groundswell of interest.
            • Roux
              • Origin:

                French from Latin
              • Meaning:

                "russet"
              • Description:

                Roux is the name of the dashing Johnny Depp character in Chocolat. Roux is French from a Latin word meaning russet or brownish red; it's also a cooking term for a mixture of flour and butter that forms the foundation of many gravies or sauces. Most of today's children with this name, pronounced roo, will actually spell it Rue, for the female character in The Hunger Games.
            • Velvet
              • Origin:

                English word name
              • Meaning:

                "a fabric characterized by a short soft dense warp pile"
              • Description:

                Velvet is a name that couldn't possibly be softer or more luxuriant. Many people have fond memories of it via the character of Velvet Brown, played by the young Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet, an intrepid young woman willing to masquerade as a boy to race her horse in a dangerous steeplechase.
            • Zoia
              • Origin:

                Slavic variation of Zoe
              • Description:

                See ZOE.