Alternatives to Alice

  1. Maude
    • Origin:

      English and French diminutive of Matilda, German
    • Meaning:

      "battle-mighty"
    • Description:

      Maude, also spelled Maud, is a lacy, mauve-tinted name that was wildly popular a hundred years ago, but has been rarely heard in the past fifty. Some stylish parents are starting to choose it again, especially as a middle.
  2. Nora
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Honora or Eleonora, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "honor or meaning unknown"
    • Description:

      Nora is a lovely, refined name that conjures up images of Belle Epoch ladies in fur-trimmed coats skating in Central Park. Long seen as a quintessentially Irish name though its roots are not in Ireland, Nora is a quietly stylish favorite that's tiptoed to the top of the popularity ladder.
  3. Olice
    • Ophelie
      • Origin:

        French variation of Ophelia
      • Meaning:

        "help"
      • Description:

        Though this name properly takes an accent over the first e, most Americans would probably have trouble pronouncing it with French elan.
    • Orlice
      • Pleasance
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "feeling of pleasure or delight"
        • Description:

          This virtue name was the middle name of Alice Liddell — the child who inspired Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland books.
      • Rose
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "rose, a flower"
        • Description:

          Rose is derived from the Latin rosa, which referred to the flower. There is also evidence to suggest it was a Norman variation of the Germanic name Hrodohaidis, meaning "famous type," and also Hros, "horse". In Old English it was translated as Roese and Rohese.
      • Sylvie
        • Origin:

          French variation of Latin Sylvia
        • Meaning:

          "from the forest"
        • Description:

          Although Sylvia seems to be having somewhat of a revival among trendsetting baby namers, we'd still opt for the even gentler and more unusual Sylvie. Despite being dated in its native France (where it was popular during the 1950s and 60s), in English-speaking regions it still feels fresh and international without being unfamiliar and has a cosmopolitan, international air. It debuted on the US Top 1000 in 2016.
      • Therese
        • Origin:

          German variation of Theresa
        • Meaning:

          "to reap, gather"
        • Description:

          Most religious form of this name, fading from use now.
      • Ursa
        • Origin:

          Short form of Ursula, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "little female bear"
        • Description:

          Ursa might be a good choice if you're looking for a bear name for your daughter but want to avoid the She Witch curse placed on Ursula by Disney's The Little Mermaid. Too bad, because Ursula is a classic and lovely name, but Ursa has less baggage.
      • 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.
      • Violet
        • Origin:

          English from Latin
        • Meaning:

          "purple"
        • Description:

          Violet is soft and sweet, yet with a vivacious edge.

      • Wendy
        • Origin:

          English, Celtic, Welsh
        • Meaning:

          "friend or white"
        • Description:

          It is popularly claimed that the name Wendy was invented by Sir James Barrie in 1904 for the big sister character in his play Peter Pan, which was followed by the classic novel in 1911. Barrie supposedly took it from the nickname "fwendy-wendy", that he was called by a young girl acquaintance.
      • Zoe
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "life"
        • Description:

          Zoe is one of those surprising names that has been on the Top 1000 nearly every year since 1880, but it's only since the turn of this century that it's ranked in the Top 100.