The Suite Life of Zack and Cody

  1. Tyler
    • Origin:

      English occupational name
    • Meaning:

      "maker of tiles"
    • Description:

      The presidential Tyler rocketed up popularity charts in the late 1980s and early 1990s (it ranked Number 9 for that entire decade), along with cousin Taylor, becoming almost pandemic across the land-- and to make matters more confusing, both (especially Taylor) have been used for girls as well.
  2. Tyreesha
    • Ursula
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "little female bear"
      • Description:

        A saint's name with a noteworthy literary background, including uses by Shakespeare in Two Gentlemen of Verona and Much Ado About Nothing, by Ben Johnson, Walter Scott, Longfellow, D. H. Lawrence and Neil Gaiman. In real life, her two most well known representatives are writer Ursula Le Guin and actress Ursula Andress. In literature, there is also Ursula Iguaran, a key, long-lived character in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's major work, One Hundred Years of Solitude.
    • Vance
      • Origin:

        English and Irish
      • Meaning:

        "someone who lives near marshland"
      • Description:

        A short but sophisticated, long-neglected name you might want to consider.
    • Veronica
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "she who brings victory; true image"
      • Description:

        The name Veronica projects a triple-threat image: at once saintly, sensuous, and strong. The name derives from Berenice, the Latin form of the Greek name Berenike "she who brings victory", with the spelling influenced by the Latin phrase vera icon "true image". Veronica was the name of the compassionate woman who wiped Jesus's face when he was on his way to Calvary and whose cloth was miraculously imprinted with his image: she is now the patron saint of photographers.
    • Vinnie
      • Wally
        • Origin:

          English, diminutive of Walter or Wallace
        • Description:

          A Leave It to Beaver/old comic-strip name, vacationing for years with the Griswolds in WallyWorld, but now back as WALL-E?
      • Wanda
        • Origin:

          Slavic or German
        • Meaning:

          "shepherdess; wanderer"
        • Description:

          Rarely heard, and when it is, usually attached to a witch. Historically, though, Wanda was a legendary eighth century queen of Poland, and in literature it is the central character of Ouida's eponymous novel Wanda. A musical namesake is the great Polish harpsichordist Wanda Landowska.
      • Warren
        • Origin:

          English from French
        • Meaning:

          "park-keeper"
        • Description:

          Long lingering in limbo, Warren suddenly seems to be on the cusp of revival. One of the oldest recorded English surnames, Warren's popularity in the U.S. dates back to the nineteenth century, and by 1921, reached its peak at Number 24.
      • Wayne
        • Origin:

          English occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "maker of wagons"
        • Description:

          When Marion Michael Morrison became John Wayne around 1930, his last name took on an air of cowboy cool that lasted about thirty years, but by now it's strictly a dad or granddad name.
      • Wilhelmina
        • Origin:

          German, feminine variation of Wilhelm
        • Meaning:

          "resolute protection"
        • Description:

          Wilhelmina was long burdened with the Old Dutch cleanser image of thick blond braids and clunky wooden clogs, but that started to be changed somewhat by the dynamic Vanessa Williams character on Ugly Betty, and even further by the choice of Wilhelmina by ace baby namers Natalie and Taylor Hanson. For the less adventurous, Willa is, for now, still a more user-friendly female equivalent of William.
      • Zack
        • Origin:

          Short form of Zachary or Zachariah
        • Description:

          As the common short form of Zachary or, more unusually, Zachariah, Zack is less intuitive than Zach or Zac in terms of spelling but clearer in terms of pronunciations. Maybe because it rhymes with Jack and Mack, it also feels more complete as a name. Some people also use Zack and brothers as a short form of Isaac.