-el and -elle Names for Boys and Girls

This list isn't comprehensive, but contains my favorite names ending in -el or -elle, a popular suffix for names.
  1. Abel
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "breath"
    • Description:

      Abel, the name of Adam and Eve's unfortunate younger son, compensates with positive connotations: capable, competent, ready and willing.
  2. Abiel
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "God is my father"
    • Description:

      Abiel is a biblical name (he was the grandfather of Saul) that was used by Puritans, particularly in Massachusetts, so it has a long pedigree. Parents are increasingly looking for underused traditional names, and this name, with the great nickname option of Abe, is ripe for more use!
  3. Abimael
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "my father is God"
    • Description:

      Colonial Americans used many Biblical names forgotten by modern baby namers; this is an Old Testament descendant of Shem. If Moses and Noah can come back, why not Abimael and brethren?
  4. Adelle
    • Adriel
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "God is my master"
      • Description:

        This biblical name is getting wider notice. While Adrian has had its time in the limelight since the late 70s, parents are beginning to look for fresher alternatives. In the Bible, Adriel was the husband of Merab, a daughter of King Saul. Adriel, like other names ending in -el like Gabriel, Raphael, and Uriel, is also the name of an angel. The angel Adriel is known as the Angel of Death. Adriel entered the charts in 2002, and has risen now into the Top 200.
    • Amabel
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "lovable"
      • Description:

        Amabel is an older name than Annabel and a lot more distinctive. Amabel was a very common name in the twelfth and thirteen centuries, then was revived during the nineteenth century British fad for medieval names.
    • Ammiel
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "people of God"
      • Description:

        There are four figures named Ammiel in the Bible. The most notable was the father of Bathsheba.
    • Angel
      • Origin:

        Spanish and English
      • Meaning:

        "angel, messenger"
      • Description:

        As a boys' name, Angel has two distinct name personalities. One is as a perennial favorite Hispanic boys’ name, popular in the US along with Spain, Mexico, and South America.
    • Angel
      • Origin:

        Spanish and English
      • Meaning:

        "angel, messenger"
      • Description:

        Angel is one of those names that has a very different trajectory for girls and boys. As a female name, it was most popular in the US from the 1970s until the turn of this century, almost breaking into the Top 100 at its peak in 2001 but then beginning a long slide down the list.
    • Annabelle
      • Origin:

        Combination of Anna and Belle or French form of Amabel
      • Meaning:

        "loving"
      • Description:

        This is a charming name that rose steeply along with other-belle names, such as Isabelle, until the horror film Annabelle and its sequels knocked it out of favor. Made famous by the Edgar Allen Poe poem Annabel Lee. Annabelle is saucy and stylish, a tad upscale, has a sense of humor, is melodious and lively, but is unfortunately off its peak.
    • Ansel
      • Origin:

        German
      • Meaning:

        "with divine protection"
      • Description:

        Ansel, primarily associated with the great western photographer Ansel Adams, famed for his magnificent photographs of the Yosemite Valley, could make a creative artist-hero choice. For Adams it was a family name – he was named after his uncle, Ansel Easton. And, in turn, Adams was the namesake of young heartthrob Ansel Elgort, son of a photographer.
    • Ariel
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "lion of God"
      • Description:

        Despite its distinguished pedigree and popularity in Israel, Disney's Little Mermaid cartoonized Ariel in the US, at least in some people's minds. But it was used for a male character in Shakespeare's The Tempest centuries ago.
    • Ariel
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "lion of God"
      • Description:

        Ariel is a male Biblical name, seen there as the messenger of Ezra, and also used as a symbolic name for the city of Jerusalem, while Shakespeare used it for a (male) sprite in The Tempest.
    • Astrophel
      • Origin:

        Literary name
      • Meaning:

        "star lover"
      • Description:

        Invented by 16th-century English poet Sir Philip Sidney for the hero of his sonnet sequence Astrophel and Stella, this name is derived from the Greek elements aster "star" and philos "lover". Sidney’s heroine, and Astrophel’s love-interest, is Stella — whose name means "star".
    • Azarel
      • Belle
        • Origin:

          Short form of Isabelle or French
        • Meaning:

          "beautiful"
        • Description:

          Belle has nothing but positive associations, from "belle of the ball" to "Southern belle" to the heroine of Disney's Beauty and the Beast. As if this weren't enough good things, Belle is also one of the most familiar and usable names that mean beautiful. Though it has been overshadowed by the Twilight-influenced Bella and longer forms like Isabella and Annabella, Belle has its own Southern charm and would make a pretty choice as a first or middle name.
      • Bethel
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "house of God"
        • Description:

          A rarely used Biblical place-name with a soft and pleasant sound.
      • Brielle
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "hunting grounds"
        • Description:

          Though it sounds so modern, Brielle is, among other things, a traditional Cajun contraction of Gabrielle, but it has now spread far beyond that community. Brielle is also the name of a historic seaport in the western Netherlands.
      • Cael
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "slender"
        • Description:

          Cael is the name of the angel of the zodiac sign of Cancer and also of a warrior of Irish mythology. Its ascendance to the Top 1000 over the past decade probably has to do with its similarity to Cale and Kale (and Kyle and Cayden etcetera).
      • Christabel
        • Origin:

          Latin and French
        • Meaning:

          "fair Christian"
        • Description:

          Though Isabel is a smash hit, Christabel still hasn't been fully embraced. It was originally popularized in England via the Coleridge poem Christabel ("whom her father loves so well") and was given to the poet's granddaughter. Christabel Pankhurst was a famous U.K. suffragist.