Botanical and Nature Names

  1. Campion
    • Daisy
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Margaret or flower name, English
      • Meaning:

        "day's eye"
      • Description:

        Daisy, fresh, wholesome, and energetic, is one of the flower names that burst back into bloom after a century's hibernation. Originally a nickname for Margaret (the French Marguerite is the word for the flower), Daisy comes from the phrase "day's eye," because it opens its petals at daybreak.
    • Fennel
      • Origin:

        Vegetable and herb name
      • Description:

        Word name possibility carrying the scent of licorice-like anise. Fennel gets its own name from the Latin word feniculum, meaning "little hay".
    • Fern
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "plant name"
      • Description:

        Of all the botanicals, Fern has been one of the slowest to move back from the front parlor into the nursery, despite the appealing girl character in the children's classic Charlotte's Web. Fern was most popular from the turn of the last century through the 1940s, reaching a high of #152 in 1916. We can certainly see her rejoining the long list of popular greenery names.
    • Forest
      • Origin:

        French occupational name
      • Meaning:

        "woodsman or woods"
      • Description:

        The Forest variation of Forrest, used by actor Whitaker, nudges the meaning more toward the woods and away from the woodsman.
    • Fox
      • Origin:

        Animal name
      • Description:

        Fox is one animal name backed by a longish tradition, and then popularized via the lead character Fox Mulder on X Files. Fox is simple, sleek, and a little bit wild, and could make an interesting middle name.
    • Fuchsia
      • Origin:

        Plant and color name
      • Description:

        A plausible color name, it was chosen by the singer Sting as a middle name for his daughter, after a character in the Gormenghast fantasy trilogy, of which he's a big fan.
    • Fen
      • Flax
        • Fuschia
          • Glen
            • Origin:

              Scottish
            • Meaning:

              "a narrow valley"
            • Description:

              Former cool-boy name now in middle-aged limbo, but with a nice naturey meaning to endear it to modern parents.
          • Glory
            • Origin:

              Word name
            • Description:

              Glory sounds fresh and uplifting and a lot more modern than Gloria (which is definitely feeling the stirrings of a revival, though some might still view it as a terminal Old Lady name). Glory, as in "Glory Be" and "Old Glory," has both a religious and a patriotic flavor.
          • Garland
            • Hawthorne
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "lives where hawthorn hedges grow"
              • Description:

                The great American novelist sets this above many other surnames (and nature names, for that matter), but it's still an imposing and adventurous choice. Do nicknames Hawk or Thorne make it more approachable? The timid should stick with Nathaniel.
            • Hazel
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "the hazelnut tree"
              • Description:

                Hazel has a pleasantly hazy, brownish-green-eyed, old-fashioned image that more and more parents are choosing to share. Former Old Lady name Hazel reentered the popularity lists in 1998 and now is near the top of the charts.
            • Holly
              • Origin:

                English nature name
              • Description:

                Holly ranks just in British Top 50, but it's been out of favor here since the 1970s Era of Nickname Names. Still, the name may be on her way back as a rejuvenated nature pick.
            • Hawkbit
              • Ianthe
                • Origin:

                  Greek
                • Meaning:

                  "purple flower"
                • Description:

                  Like Violet, Lavender and Lilac, Ianthe is a purple flower name. Chosen by the poet Shelley for his daughter, Ianthe has a poetic, romantic, almost ethereal quality. In the ancient myth, she was the daughter of Oceanus, supreme ruler of the sea, and also a Cretan woman so beautiful that when she died the Gods made purple flowers grow around her grave.
              • Indigo
                • Origin:

                  Greek
                • Meaning:

                  "Indian dye"
                • Description:

                  Indigo is one of the most appealing and evocative of the new generation of color names. Color names have joined flower and jewel names -- in a big way -- and Indigo, a deep blue-purple dye from plants native to India, is particularly striking for both girls and boys. Indigo is the name of a character in the Ntozake Shange novel Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo, and was used for his daughter by Lou Diamond Phillips.
              • Iris
                • Origin:

                  Flower name; Greek
                • Meaning:

                  "rainbow"
                • Description:

                  Iris has so much going for it. It's a fashionable flower name. It's a mythological name, from the Greek goddess of the rainbow. And it's a classic name, always ranking in the girls' Top 1000 but now at its highest point ever.