Girl Flower Names

  1. Bluebell
    • Origin:

      Flower name from English
    • Meaning:

      "blue bell"
    • Description:

      Bluebell is one flower name that is used very quietly. Geri "Ginger Spice" Halliwell joined her former Spice Sisters in creative baby-naming with this adventurous -- some might say outlandish -- choice. Distinctive and charming? Or better suited to a farmyard animal? Your call.
  2. Briar
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "a thorny patch"
    • Description:

      Fairy-tale memories of Sleeping Beauty inspire some parents—such as Rachel Bilson and Hayden Christensen—to call their daughters Briar Rose. But Briar plus a different middle name might work even better. It's one of the newly popular nature-word names, charting in the US for the first time in 2015 for both genders.
  3. Bryony
    • Origin:

      Latin flower name
    • Meaning:

      "to sprout"
    • Description:

      Bryony is an unusually strong plant name --the bryony is a wild climbing vine with green flowers --that caught on in the U.K. before sprouting here. The name of the young character in the Ian McEwan novel Atonement is spelled Briony, which is the variation and Bryony the original.
  4. Blimah
    • Bloom
      • Calantha
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "lovely flower"
        • Description:

          Another of the new Greek-accented Cal- names.
      • Calanthe
        • Origin:

          botanical name
        • Meaning:

          "Christmas orchid"
        • Description:

          If you love Calliope and Callista, you'll love Calanthe, which combines the trendiness of the Greek 'cal' names with the equally fashionable "the" ending (like Xanthe and Evanthe) and a connection to the beautiful Christmas Orchid. Color Calantha one of the more unusual and captivating names for Christmas babies.
      • Calla
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "beautiful"
        • Description:

          Calla is a lily name that is much more distinctive and delicate than Lily. Rarely heard today, it did appear in the popularity lists in the last decades of the nineteenth century.
      • Calytrix
        • Origin:

          Botanical, from Greek
        • Meaning:

          "star-flower (English name)"
        • Description:

          The Calytrix flower is endemic to much of Australia and is part of the myrtle family. They are commonly known as star flowers, due to their dainty (usually bright white) 5 petalled flowers. The name derives from Greek calyx "cup" + trix "hair".
      • Camellia
        • Origin:

          Flower name, from Czech surname
        • Meaning:

          "Kamel's flower"
        • Description:

          Camellia is a rare flower name with distinct roots related to the Camille/Camila group and has varied associations to the moon, water, wealth, and perfection. It could be thought of as a floral replacement for Amelia.
      • Cassia
        • Origin:

          Feminine form of Cassius or Greek
        • Meaning:

          "cinnamon"
        • Description:

          Cassia is related to the cassia tree, which has yellow flowers and produces a spice that can be a substitute for cinnamon. Keziah, the name of Job’s daughter in the Old Testament, derives from the name of the plant as well. Cassia also has ties to the Ancient Roman name Cassius, an Ancient Roman family name meaning "hollow."
      • Chloris
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "pale"
        • Description:

          Antiseptic sounding.
      • Chrysanthemum
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "gold flower"
        • Description:

          One of the rarest of the flower names, that of the blossom celebrated in Japan as a symbol of the sun and a possible object of meditation. One of the rare flower names counted among names for autumn babies, Chrysanthemum is also one of the most unusual nature-themed girl names starting with C.
      • Clove
        • Origin:

          Nature name
        • Description:

          Clove is a spice name that is a tad more piquant than Saffron or Cinnamon. It might get more attention now as a member of The Hunger Games family of names.
      • Clover
        • Origin:

          Flower name, from Old English
        • Meaning:

          "key"
        • Description:

          Clover is a charming, perky choice if you want to move beyond hothouse blooms like Rose and Lily, and it's recently become a new celeb favorite, chosen by both Neal McDonough and Natasha Gregson Wagner, who used it to honor her mother, Natalie Wood, one of whose most iconic films was Inside Daisy Clover.
      • Cosima
        • Origin:

          Italian feminine variation of Cosmo, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "order, beauty, universe"
        • Description:

          Cosima, the kind of elegant and unusual name the British upper classes love to use for their daughters, is given to a handful of baby girls in the US after being chosen by two high-profile celebs in the same month; cool couple Sofia Coppola and Thomas Mars as well as supermodel Claudia Schiffer. It was used earlier by celebrity chef Nigella Lawson, while the male form, Cosimo, was given to the son of Marissa Ribisi and Beck.
      • Cynthia
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "moon goddess or, woman from Kynthos"
        • Description:

          Cynthia is an attractive name -- in classical mythology an epithet for Artemis or Diana -- that was so overexposed in the middle of the twentieth century, along with its nickname Cindy, that it fell into a period of benign neglect, but now is ripe for reconsideration in its full form.
      • Carnation
        • Crisantha
          • Daffodil
            • Origin:

              Flower name, from Greek
            • Meaning:

              "asphodel"
            • Description:

              Yes, though it seems so extreme, girls were actually sometimes given this name a century ago; now it is so uncommon it would make a strong springtime statement. Biggest obstacle: the nickname Daffy.