My favourite names!

5 future princesses...
  1. Cecilia
    • Origin:

      Feminine form of Cecil, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "blind"
    • Description:

      Cecilia is a lovely classic name deservedly enjoying a new turn in the sun. Always among the Top 500 girls' names in the US, Cecilia is now at its highest point ever.
  2. Cecilia Olivia
    • Dee
      • Origin:

        Nickname for any girl name that starts with D
      • Description:

        Dee is a slight midcentury nickname that might be short for Deanna or Denise, but might be too slight for today's strong, independent female.
    • Dovie
      • Origin:

        Short form of Dove or Deborah, nature name or Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "bee"
      • Description:

        Dovie was a fairly popular nickname name a century or more ago, dropping off the Top 1000 in the 1940s only to be heading straight back uphill now.
    • Freya
      • Origin:

        Norse
      • Meaning:

        "a noble woman"
      • Description:

        Freya has long been popular in the U.K. but has only taken off in the US in the last decade, along with the entire category of mythological names. Derived from the Old Norse name Freyja, meaning "Lady, noble woman", Freya is the name of the Norse goddess of love, beauty, and fertility.
    • Freya Niamh
      • Gracie
        • Origin:

          English, diminutive of Grace
        • Description:

          Cute Gracie is one of the more recently revived nickname names by parents who chose it over the more formal Grace--or variations like Graziella or Grania. Country singers Faith Hill and Tim McGraw cut straight to the nickname when they called one of their daughters Gracie, and actors Ron Livingston and Rosemarie DeWitt named their newborn daughter Gracie James. Gracie Gold is a popular young figure skater.
      • Gracie Dee
        • Kayla
          • Origin:

            Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "laurel, crown"
          • Description:

            Kayla is a modern invented name that emerged in the late 1950s. Despite its similarity to the name Michaela, Kayla most likely began as a combination of the then-popular name Kay and -la suffix. Alternatively, it may be a variation of the Yiddish name Kaila, which derived from the Hebrew name Kelila. Kayla can also be considered an Anglicization of the Gaelic surname MacCaollaidhe or MacCathail.
        • Nettie
          • Origin:

            English, diminutive of names ending in -ette or -etta, or variation of Neta, Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "plant"
          • Description:

            You may never have known a Nettie personally, but there well might be one hidden in your family history, considering that she was a Top 100 name until 1901 and stayed on the Social Security list until 1962.
        • Niamh
          • Origin:

            Irish Gaelic
          • Meaning:

            "bright"
          • Description:

            Niamh, derived from the Old Irish Niam, is an ancient Irish name that was originally a term for a goddess. In Irish myth, one who bore it was Niamh of the Golden Hair, daughter of the sea god, who falls in love with Finn's son Oisin and takes him to the Land of Promise, where they stayed for three hundred years. Niamh can be Anglicized as Neve, Nieve, or Neave.
        • Nettie Kayla
          • Sheila
            • Origin:

              Irish variation of Cecilia
            • Meaning:

              "blind"
            • Description:

              Sheila peaked in popularity from the 1930s to the 1960s (she reached Number 49 in 1965), along with Maureen and Colleen; parents today would probably go back to the original Cecilia or forward to Shea.
          • Sissy
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of Cecilia; pet name for "sister"
            • Meaning:

              "sister"
            • Description:

              Old-fashioned nickname for a sister, almost never heard today.
          • Sheila Hailey