Names in Nature, a garden to pick from

Beyond the names Rose and Daisy, there are many different flowers to pick in this garden of names!
  1. Allysa
    • Antigone
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "worthy of one's parents, in place of one's parents"
      • Description:

        In Greek mytholgy, Antigone was the noble and courageous daughter of Oedipus, who acts as his guide after he blinds himself. Antigone is also the eponymous heroine of a play by Jean Anouilh.
    • Armeria
      • Astilbe
        • Blodwen
          • Origin:

            Welsh
          • Meaning:

            "white flower"
          • Description:

            An unusual floral -wen name which was the name of an 1878 opera by Welsh composer Joseph Parry.
        • Briallen
          • Origin:

            Welsh
          • Meaning:

            "primrose"
          • Description:

            Unusual floral name which would be perfect for a spring baby girl, if you can pronounce the Welsh double L correctly. It's a tricky sound for non-native Welsh speakers, kind of halfway between an H and an L.
        • Calandra
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "lark"
          • Description:

            Calista Flockhart opened the door to a whole flock of graceful and unusual Greek names like this. Some others are Calantha, Calla, Carissa, and Cassia.
        • Dahlia
          • Origin:

            Flower name, from Swedish surname
          • Meaning:

            "Dahl's flower"
          • Description:

            One of the flower names, used occasionally in Britain (where it's pronounced DAY-lee-a). It seems to have recovered from what was perceived as a slightly affected la-di-dah air. The flower was named in honor of the pioneering Swedish botanist Andreas Dahl, which means dale.
        • Delonix
          • Fraxin
            • Gladys
              • Origin:

                Possibly a form or Claudia or Welsh
              • Meaning:

                "land, nation"
              • Description:

                Hard as it might be to believe, Gladys was the Harper of 1900, emerging almost out of nowhere to take the naming world by storm. It became a favorite among parents — and writers of romantic Edwardian novels, seen as alluring and unusual. One impetus was the 1870 Ouida novel Puck, whose heroine was the idealized beauty, Gladys Gerant.
            • Hyssop
              • Ismene
                • Origin:

                  Greek
                • Meaning:

                  "knowledgeable"
                • Description:

                  Sister of Antigone and daughter of Oedipus in Greek mythology, Ismene's name is unlikely to make it in modern times because of its teasability factor. Ismay or Esme would be better bets.
              • Iberis
                • Ilex
                  • Lithodora
                    • Marigold
                      • Origin:

                        Flower name, from English
                      • Meaning:

                        "golden flower"
                      • Description:

                        Marigold, once found almost exclusively in English novels and aristocratic nurseries, is beginning to be talked about and considered here. It has a sweet, sunny, quirky feel. The marigold was the symbol of the Virgin Mary.
                    • Melissa
                      • Myrica
                        • Nerine