Miss USA + Miss America contestant/winner names

A lot of them have interesting names so I thought I'd make a list.
  1. Betty
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Elizabeth
    • Meaning:

      "pledged to God"
    • Description:

      Combine the popularity of Betty White and Mad Men's glamorous Betty Draper Francis, with the residual sweetness of Ugly Betty's Betty Suarez, and the result is an impending return of the name. It's got presidential cred via Betty Ford and feminist history through Betty Friedan.
  2. Bess
    • Hope
      • Origin:

        Virtue name
      • Description:

        Can a name as virtuous as Hope be cool and trendy? Strangely enough -- yes. But though this optimistic Puritan favorite is experiencing substantial popularity, Hope is too pure and elegant to be corrupted, a lovely classic that deserves all the attention it's getting.
    • Jackie
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "God is gracious"
      • Description:

        A cute diminutive of Jack, already technically a nickname for John, famously borne by Hong Kong actor, director and martial artist Jackie Chan.
    • Lee
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "pasture, meadow"
      • Description:

        The original brief, breezy name is somewhat out of favor now even as a middle name. The Leigh spelling has more substance and is more identifiable as female.
    • Macel
      • Margaret
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "pearl"
        • Description:

          Margaret is derived from the French Marguerite, which in turn came from Margarita, the Latin form of the Greek Margarites. Margarites was based on the Old Persian word margārīta, meaning "pearl."
      • Mifauny
        • Neely
          • Nina
            • Origin:

              Short form of names that end in -nina
            • Description:

              Nina is as multiethnic as you can get: Nina is a common nickname name in Spain and Russia, a Babylonian goddess of the oceans, and an Incan goddess of fire. Here and now, it's a stylish possibility that's been underused. "Weird Al" Yankovic chose this decidedly nonweird name for his daughter.
          • Vanessa
            • Origin:

              Literary invention; also a species of butterfly
            • Description:

              Vanessa was invented by writer Jonathan Swift for a lover named Esther Vanhomrigh—he combined the first syllable of her last name with the initial syllable of her first. Swift used it in the poem Cadenus and Vanessa in 1713. A century later, Johan Christian Fabricius used Vanessa as the name of a genus of butterfly.
          • Yolande