Wild Unpredictable Nature

  1. Cocoa
    • Origin:

      Color and food name
    • Description:

      Do everyone a favor and spell it Coco, an up-and-coming choice.
  2. Coral
    • Origin:

      Nature name
    • Description:

      First used during the Victorian craze for jewel names; it could rise again, along with Ruby and Pearl, though it doesn't have as much luster.
  3. Crane
    • Origin:

      English surname
    • Meaning:

      "crane"
    • Description:

      This elegant surname has great potential to turn into an unusual first name, especially with its literary associations to both Stephen and Hart Crane.
  4. Cricket
    • Origin:

      Nature name
    • Description:

      Nickname name from the era of Father Knows Best, though we can see it making something of a comeback, a la Clover and Pippa. Cricket has new potential especially since it has recently been chosen by Busy Philipps. Still, it's one of the quirkier girl names starting with C.
  5. Caldera
    • Catkin
      • Celandine
        • Chrysanthe
          • Clavaria
            • Clover
              • Coriander
                • 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.
                • Dawn
                  • Origin:

                    English
                  • Meaning:

                    "dawn, sunrise"
                  • Description:

                    Dawn's heyday in the US, Canada and the UK came in the 1960s and 70s. It peaked at #14 in the US in 1971, but has since sunk from sight to be eclipsed by other names with the same meaning, such as Aurora, Roxana or Zariah.
                • Dove
                  • Origin:

                    Nature name
                  • Meaning:

                    "dove, a bird"
                  • Description:

                    One of the new bird names, like Lark and Wren, this one's associated with the billing and cooing sounds of love. Soft and gentle, Dove also has the admirable association with peace.
                • Dandelion
                  • Elowen
                    • Origin:

                      Cornish
                    • Meaning:

                      "elm"
                    • Description:

                      A beautiful modern Cornish nature name that is rapidly picking up steam in the States: even spawning variant spellings like Elowyn and Elowynn. In its native region, it wasn't widely used as a name before the twentieth century, when the Cornish language was revived. A (currently) unique member of the fashionble El- family of names, it has a pleasant, evocative sound.
                  • Fawn
                    • Origin:

                      Nature name
                    • Meaning:

                      "a young deer"
                    • Description:

                      The doe-eyed Fawn is as gentle and soft as the baby deer it represents. And much like that baby deer, it carries with it the potential of new life. Fawn was featured at the bottom of the Top 1000 throughout the '60s and '70s — around the same time that Bambi came into play. But unlike Bambi, Fawn maintains relevance in the 21st century, thanks to its warmth and ties to the natural world. We would love to meet more baby girls named Fawn.
                  • 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.
                  • Finch
                    • Origin:

                      English word and nature name
                    • Meaning:

                      "to swindle"
                    • Description:

                      It feels like Finch should be a modern bird name that's as popular as Wren or Lark, but that's not the case - so it's one to consider if you're looking for a nature name that's familiar but rare.
                  • 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.