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  1. Daelyn
    • Danny
      • Dimitri
        • Origin:

          Russian from Greek Demetrius
        • Meaning:

          "follower of Demeter"
        • Description:

          Dimitri is a Slavic variation of the Russian Dmitriy, a name that comes from the Greek Demetrius. Demetrius was derived from Demeter, the name of the Greek goddess of fertility and farming. Among the possible spelling variations are Dmitri, Dmitrii, Dmitriy, and Dmitry.
      • Gilly
        • Grell
          • Judith
            • Origin:

              Hebrew
            • Meaning:

              "woman from Judea"
            • Description:

              The biblical Judith, the fourth most popular name in 1940, may be getting ready for a comeback in its full, elegant, if somewhat solemn form. Many of those earlier Judiths were called Judy—some after Judy (born Frances) Garland—preferring it over their more formal proper name. Today, Judith, like Deborah, may have shaken off just enough to appeal to parents looking for a traditional, yet under-the-radar biblical name. And Jude would be a likelier nickname these days than the Judge Judy connection.
          • Juno
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "queen of the heavens"
            • Description:

              Juno is an ancient name that feels as fresh as if it had been minted — well, not yesterday, but in 2007. Since the release of the popular indie film Juno, this lively but strong o-ending Roman goddess name has become more and more prominent as a potential baby name — Coldplay's Will Champion chose Juno for one of his twins (whose brother is the kingly Rex).
          • Kiba
            • Lula
              • Origin:

                Diminutive of any Lu name
              • Description:

                Lula is one of the livelier nickname-names with the fashionable double-L sound: It joins Lulu, Lila, Lily, and Lou among the trendiest names today. Lula might be short for Talula and sisters or for Lucy or Louise, or may stand on its own two adorable feet. Lula was actually a Top 50 name in the late 1880's and continued in the Top 100 for a couple of decades more.
            • Nikolai
              • Origin:

                Russian variation of Nicholas
              • Meaning:

                "people of victory"
              • Description:

                Russian forms, like Russian supermodels, are hot these days. This is a strong, worldly way to make Nicholas new; it was chosen for his son by Barry Bonds, Jr. Nikolai also comes with several attractive nickname options, including approachable Nik, spunky Niko, or even hip Kai. A traditional nickname for Nikolai in Russia is Kolya.
            • Pippa
              • Origin:

                English, diminutive of Philippa
              • Meaning:

                "lover of horses"
              • Description:

                Pippa, a peppy condensation of Philippa that turns it from serious to sprightly, has come into the public eye in a big way via the former Kate Middleton's sister.
            • Queenie
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "queen"
              • Description:

                Wisecracking waitress name stuck in the luncheonette. Started as nickname for girls named Regina -- queen in Latin -- now mostly a canine choice.
            • Riley
              • Origin:

                English, Irish
              • Meaning:

                "rye clearing; courageous"
              • Description:

                Riley -- one of the most popular unisex names -- is trendier now for girls though for boys it's a classic, ALWAYS ranking in the US Top 1000.
            • Sebastian
              • Origin:

                Latin from Greek
              • Meaning:

                "person from ancient city of Sebastia"
              • Description:

                Sebastian is an ancient martyr's name turned literary, and Little Mermaid hero—think Sebastian the Crab—that's more popular than ever, as a classic-yet-unconventional compatriot for fellow British favorites T Theodore and Oliver.