Popular Girls Names in France

  1. Anaïs
    • Camille
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "young ceremonial attendant"
      • Description:

        At one time just the sound of the name Camille could start people coughing, recalling the tragic Lady of the Camellias, the heroine played by Greta Garbo in the vintage film based on a Dumas story, but that image has faded, replaced by a sleek, chic, highly attractive one.
    • Charlotte
      • Origin:

        French, feminine diminutive of Charles
      • Meaning:

        "free man"
      • Description:

        Charlotte, the name of the young Princess of Cambridge, is the latest classic name to join Sophia, Emma, Olivia, and Isabella at the top of the popularity list. It is now among the most popular girl names in many English-speaking and European countries.
    • Clara
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "bright, clear"
      • Description:

        Clara is a strong, lovely girls' name that's always ranked among the US Top 1000 girl names but has been climbing since the turn of this century. It now ranks right around Number 100, making it a modern classic that's neither too popular nor unfamiliar.
    • Chloé
      • Clémence
        • Célia
          • Emma
            • Origin:

              German
            • Meaning:

              "universal"
            • Description:

              Emma has now been among the top girl names in the United States for several years, claiming the Number 1 crown in 2008 and again from 2015 to 2018 before dropping back to second place.
          • Eva
            • Origin:

              Latin form of Eve, Hebrew
            • Meaning:

              "life"
            • Description:

              Eva is a simple, classic Hebrew name for girls that recently slipped out of the US Top 100 for the first time in more than a decade. Pronounced either like her more popular sister Ava or less popular sister Eve, Eva is one of the elite group of girl names that mean life.
          • Ines
            • Origin:

              Italian, Portuguese, Slovene and Croatian variation of Agnes
            • Meaning:

              "pure, virginal"
            • Description:

              This form of Agnes, Ines has always been popular since the true story of the thwarted lovers Queen Ines of Castro and King Peter of Portugal. This has to be one of the most heartbreaking and bloody true romances in history!
          • Jade
            • Origin:

              Spanish
            • Meaning:

              "stone of the side"
            • Description:

              As a precious stone, Jade is known for its cool green hues, its importance in Chinese art, and its ability to transmit wisdom, confidence, and clarity. As a name however, Jade is a 90’s throwback in the UK, a Number 1 choice in France, and a returning gem in the US right now.
          • Julie
            • Origin:

              French from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "youthful, sky father"
            • Description:

              Wildly popular in the 1960s and '70s, Julie is no longer anywhere near as stylish as the name's longer forms. Try Juliet, Juliana, or even the more grownup Julia.
          • Juliette
            • Origin:

              French from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "little Julia"
            • Description:

              Juliette, pronounced with the emphasis on the last syllable, adds a little something extra to Juliet. In the past years it has been rising up the chart.
          • Laura
            • Origin:

              English from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "from Laurentum or bay laurel"
            • Description:

              Laura is a hauntingly evocative perennial, never trendy, never dated, feminine without being fussy, with literary links stretching back to Dante. All this makes Laura a more solid choice than any of its more decorative counterparts and one of the most classic girl names starting with L.
          • Lena
            • Origin:

              English, Scottish, Dutch, German, and Scandinavian, diminutive of various names ending in -lena
            • Description:

              This pet form of Helena and other ena-ending names, long used as an independent name, is attracting notice again as an option both multicultural and simple. Lena was a Top 100 name from 1880 to 1920.
          • Lilou
            • Origin:

              Occitan pet form of French Liliane
            • Meaning:

              "lily"
            • Description:

              Lilou is a charming, rarely heard import. Occitan is a language spoken in Provence, in the south of France, in which the suffix "ou" denotes a pet form — thus, Lilou as a short form of Liliane or its Occitan form Liliana or Liliano. Its popularity in France--where it's currently Number 12--can be traced to the 1997 film The Fifth Element.
          • Lisa
            • Origin:

              English, German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Italian
            • Meaning:

              "pledged to God"
            • Description:

              Elvis naming his daughter Lisa Marie and Nat King Cole's hit song "Mona Lisa" conspired to catapult one of Elizabeth's many offshoots to a high of #4 in 1970.
          • Lola
            • Origin:

              Spanish, diminutive of Dolores
            • Meaning:

              "lady of sorrows"
            • Description:

              A hot starbaby name – chosen by Kelly Ripa, Chris Rock, Lisa Bonet, Denise Richards and Charlie Sheen, Carnie Wilson, and Annie Lennox, and used as the nickname of Madonna's Lourdes – Lola manages to feel fun and sassy without going over the top. Be warned, though: "Whatever Lola wants, Lola gets," to quote a song from the show Damn Yankees.
          • Louise
            • Origin:

              French and English, feminine variation of Louis
            • Meaning:

              "renowned warrior"
            • Description:

              Louise has for several decades now been seen as competent, studious, and efficient—desirable if not dramatic qualities. But now along with a raft of other L names, as well as cousin Eloise, Louise is up for reappreciation—sleek and chic, stylish in Paris, and starting to become so in the US as well. Louisa is perhaps more in tune with the times, but Louise has more edge. Louise has been on the rise lately, and reentered the US Top 1000 for the first time in a quarter century in 2016.
          • Lucie
            • Origin:

              French, English
            • Meaning:

              "light"
            • Description:

              The French spelling of Lucy feels particularly light and shimmery.