Boho Names from Free People

  1. Reeves
    • Origin:

      English occupational name
    • Meaning:

      "bailiff"
    • Description:

      With the fashion for adding an S to the end of any surname-name, Reeve becomes Reeves, love child of Reese and Jeeves. It's cool, simple, distinctive.
  2. Rickie
    • Rocky
      • Origin:

        English, Italian
      • Meaning:

        "rock or rest"
      • Description:

        How many decades will it take for Rocky to triumph over its association with Sylvester Stallone's battered but not beaten boxer? The moment may have come, now that Sarah Michelle Gellar and Freddie Prinze Jr. have named their son Rocky. It helps, too, that Madonna's son Rocco helped make the name child-appropriate again.
    • Rodin
      • Roman
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "citizen of Rome"
        • Description:

          Roman is an ancient name trending in a major way. A surprise hit name of recent years, Roman now ranks in the Top 100 not only in the US but throughout the English-speaking world, and is rising in other European countries as well.
      • Rosabel
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "beautiful rose"
        • Description:

          Rosabel, a vintage smoosh name created in the 18th century, feels slightly less frilly than her cousins Rosabelle and Rosabella. It could make for a more distinctive alternative to Isabel, or an unusual name that gets you to sweet nicknames Rosie or Belle.
      • Rosaline
        • Origin:

          Medieval variation of Rosalind
        • Description:

          Rosaline, which can be pronounced to rhyme with mine or mean in its final syllable, has a deeper, richer pedigree than it might seem. Rosaline was used twice by Shakespeare and was also used in the poetry of Edmund Spenser. While we prefer the stronger-sounding Rosalind or Rosamund, Rosaline deserves another contemporary look.
      • Ross
        • Origin:

          English and Scottish
        • Meaning:

          "upland, peninsula"
        • Description:

          Like Friends, Ross is off the air and into syndication as a baby name, having plummeted from its zenith in the late 80s to fall off the US Top 1000 in 2013. Today, Ross is more likely to be a dad name than a newborn name.
      • Roxy
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Roxanne, Persian
        • Meaning:

          "dawn"
        • Description:

          Roxy, also spelled Roxie, is one of those high-stepping showgal names with plenty of moxie, among the many sassy nickname names on the U.K. popularity list--currently Number 398.
      • Royal
        • Origin:

          English word name
        • Meaning:

          "royal"
        • Description:

          Even less subtle than Duke or Earl, this name shot up the popularity charts in 2013, the same year young Prince George was born and the craze for all things royal (and Royal) began. Today, it's a leading boys' name on Nameberry's own popularity charts.
      • Ruby
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "deep red precious stone"
        • Description:

          Vibrant, sassy, and bubbly, Ruby is a vintage gem that hasn’t lost any of its sparkle. Currently popular in a number of English-speaking countries, Ruby is proof of the 100 Year Rule, trending again for the first time since its heyday in the 1910s.
      • Rhi
        • Rhine
          • Rolla
            • Rometty
              • Roseland
                • Royln
                  • Ryker
                    • Sabrina
                      • Origin:

                        Celtic, Latin name for the River Severn
                      • Description:

                        Sabrina, the bewitchingly radiant name of a legendary Celtic goddess, is best known as the heroine of the eponymous film, originally played by Audrey Hepburn, and later as a teenage TV witch; it would make a distinctive alternative to the ultrapopular Samantha. Similar names you might also want to consider include Sabina and Serena.
                    • Sadie
                      • Origin:

                        Diminutive of Sarah
                      • Meaning:

                        "princess"
                      • Description:

                        Sadie started as a nickname for Sarah, but their images couldn't be more disparate. Where Sarah is serious and sweet, Sadie is full of sass and fun.