Eccentric Botanical Names for Girls

  1. Linaria
    • Lobelia
      • Lupine
        • Marigold
          • Origin:

            Flower name, from English
          • Meaning:

            "golden flower"
          • Description:

            Marigold, once found almost exclusively in English novels and aristocratic nurseries, is beginning to be talked about and considered here. It has a sweet, sunny, quirky feel. The marigold was the symbol of the Virgin Mary.
        • Mignonette
          • Origin:

            Form of Mignon, French
          • Meaning:

            "delicate, dainty"
          • Description:

            Mignonette is kind of a diminutive of a diminutive. Mignon is the French word for cute, so Mignonette is more or less cutie.
        • Monarda
          • Nigella
            • Origin:

              Feminine variation of Nigel; botanical name from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "black"
            • Description:

              A name that sounded unthinkably priggish until it became attached to Domestic Goddess British TV chef Nigella Lawson (named for her father), who gave it a big dollop of glamour.
          • Nicotiana
            • Pansy
              • Origin:

                English flower name from French
              • Meaning:

                "thought"
              • Description:

                Pansy is an early floral name that lost credibility when it became a derogatory slang term for gay people. Better these days: Posy or Poppy.
            • Peony
              • Origin:

                Flower name; Latin
              • Meaning:

                "healing"
              • Description:

                One of the rarest of the floral names, though not without some teasing potential. Peony is a historical 1948 novel by Pearl S. Buck.
            • Petal
              • Origin:

                English from Greek
              • Meaning:

                "leaf"
              • Description:

                Petal is the soft and sweet-smelling name of a character in the novel and film, The Shipping News. With the rise of such flower names as Poppy and Posy, we believe Petal — down-to-earth yet romantic — has its own appealingly distinctive style.
            • Petunia
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "trumpet-shaped flower"
              • Description:

                Literary heritage: the "Loony Tunes" girlfriend of Porky Pig. But with the increasing popularity of all kinds of unusual botanical names, Petunia may be a name we start to hear more of. Perhaps-more-pleasing Petunia alternatives: Petal, Posy, Poppy.
            • Poppy
              • Origin:

                Flower name, English from Latin
              • Meaning:

                "red flower"
              • Description:

                Poppy, unlike most floral names which are sweet and feminine, has a lot of spunk. Long popular throughout the rest of the English-speaking world, Poppy is finally starting to rise toward the top in the US, where it entered the Top 1000 for the first time in 2016.
            • Posy
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "a bunch of flowers"
              • Description:

                A sweet, nostalgic nosegay kind of name, Posy has been long fashionable in England, a country of gardeners, but this pretty bouquet-of-flowers name is still rarely heard in the US, though it could be seen as a more unusual possible alternative to Rosy or Josie.
            • Primrose
              • Origin:

                English flower name
              • Meaning:

                "first rose"
              • Description:

                A quaint and quirky flower name, until recently considered a bit too prim for most American classrooms but brought back to life in recent years by the attractive character of Primrose "Prim" Everdeen in the Hunger Games series. In the Top 300 girl names in England and Wales and on Nameberry, Primrose remains rare in the US, but is made more accessible by a raft of sweet nickname options, including Rosie and Posy.
            • Penstemon
              • Phacelia
                • Phlox
                  • Rudbeckia
                    • Salvia
                      • Origin:

                        Latin
                      • Meaning:

                        "whole, healthy"
                      • Description:

                        Another name for the herb sage -- which sounds younger and more modern than this version.