Black American Babies

  1. Tia
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of names ending -tia
    • Description:

      A short, bright name which originates as a short form of names including Tiana, and Tatiana. Not as popular as Mia – a plus if you're seeking a short and pretty but less common name. In Spanish and Portuguese tía/tia is a word meaning "aunt". In Haida culture in indigenous Canada, Tia is a goddess of peaceful death.
  2. Tiana
    • Origin:

      Slavic
    • Meaning:

      "fairy queen"
    • Description:

      Tiana gained a lot of popularity after Disney bestowed this pretty name upon its first African-American princess. Although it has declined in usage over recent years, Tiana’s connections to dainty Tatiana, Christiana and Bastiana should see it in continued usage for a while to come. Read more about Tiana and other Disney Princess Names in our featured blog.
  3. Traevon
    • Trey
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "three"
      • Description:

        Originally a nickname for a third-generation son, as in Thurman Thackeray III, Trey is now being given to others, and it has also expanded to Treynor and Treyton.
    • Tyrese
      • Taneka
        • Treasure
          • Vernon
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "place of alders"
            • Description:

              Once aristocratic British surname yet to be revived. Vince Vaughn recently gave his son the same double initials as his own when he named him Vernon Vaughn.
          • 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.
          • 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.
          • Whitney
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "white island"
            • Description:

              Deriving from an English locational surname meaning "white island", Whitney was in rare but regular use for boys in the US until the early 1960s, when actress Whitney Blake popularized it for girls. It received a further big boost on the girls' side in the 1980s, thanks to singer Whitney Houston. Now falling rapidly down the rankings, it could be time to reclaim this one for the boys, if only as a neat way to cool-guy nickname Whit.
          • Will
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of William
            • Meaning:

              "resolute protector"
            • Description:

              Will has definitely replaced Bill, not only as a nickname for William but as a stand-alone name as well, partly thanks to England's Prince William, also known as Wills.
          • Xavier
            • Origin:

              Basque
            • Meaning:

              "new house"
            • Description:

              Xavier originated is use as a given name after Saint Francis Xavier, cofounder of the Jesuit order, who got his name from the Spanish-Basque village where he was born. His birthplace was Javier, the name of which was derived from the Basque place name Etxeberria, meaning "castle" or "new house." Many Americans pronounce the initial X, as in ex-ZAY-vee-er, but it's equally accepted to pronounce the name ZAY-vee-er, closer to the French pronunciation.
          • Yvette
            • Origin:

              French, feminine of Yves
            • Meaning:

              "yew tree"
            • Description:

              This French name has the elegance of other '-ette' names such as Colette and is a botanical name without being too obvious about it.
          • Yvonne
            • Origin:

              French
            • Meaning:

              "yew wood"
            • Description:

              Peaking in the 1950s, Yvonne has now dropped out of the Top 1000 in 2003 and doesn't look set to return soon, although its rare Y initial might endear it to some. Yvaine, from Neil Gaiman's Stardust, has more modern appeal.
          • Zayn
            • Origin:

              Arabic
            • Meaning:

              "beauty, grace"
            • Description:

              Zayn zoomed up the popularity charts thanks to former One Direction member Zayn Malik; it was one of the fastest-rising names of 2016. The name can also be spelled Zain; the feminine version is Zayna or Zaina.
          • Zora
            • Origin:

              Serbo-Croatian
            • Meaning:

              "dawn"
            • Description:

              Zora is a meaningful literary heroine name honoring Zora Neale Hurston, an important black writer and leader of the Harlem Renaissance.