Safe girl names and guilty pleasures

The ultimate list of girls names, safe bets and guilty pleasures, international flair and awesome meanings
  1. Alessandra
    • Origin:

      Italian and Spanish variation of Alexandra
    • Meaning:

      "defending men"
    • Description:

      This softened version is even prettier than the original.
  2. Alexia
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Alexandria
    • Meaning:

      "defending men"
    • Description:

      This diminutive, similar to Alex or Alexis, has been yo-yoing in popularity since the turn of the 21st century.
  3. Allouette
    • Altalune
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "over the moon"
      • Description:

        Altalune is an invention used by Uma Thurman and Arpad Busson as one of several middle names for their daughter, its Latin meaning roughly translated as "over the moon." Celebrity baby Altalune will be called the more familiar Luna for short.
    • Amalina
      • Amalita
        • Amoret
          • Origin:

            Literary name
          • Description:

            This lovely name from Spenser's The Faerie Queene is borne by a character who represents married love. A related unusual-yet-usable choice: Amabel.
        • Anouk
          • Origin:

            Dutch and French variation of Anna
          • Meaning:

            "grace"
          • Description:

            Anouk, made famous by French actress Anouk Aimée, is a singular name with a lovely sound and a Bohemian feel. Anouk Aimée was born as Francoise, but adopted the first name of the character she played in her debut film.
        • Antoinette
          • Origin:

            French feminine diminutive form of Antoine
          • Meaning:

            "priceless one"
          • Description:

            This feminization of Anthony, like other early French forms, such as Babette and Nanette, is not heard as often as it once was, but it could be time for a reappraisal of this delicate Gallic choice.
        • Arizona
          • Origin:

            Place-name from Papago Indian
          • Meaning:

            "little springs"
          • Description:

            We usually think of place-names as a modern invention, but in fact Arizona ranked on the US Top 1000 from its inception in 1880 until 1911, when it vanished below the surface. It peaked at Number 510 in 1882, before Arizona became a state. One notorious vintage bearer: criminal "Ma" Barker, born Arizona Clark.
        • Arwen
          • Origin:

            Literature, Sindarin
          • Meaning:

            "noble maiden"
          • Description:

            Arwen is well known as princess of the Elves in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. The author took inspiration from Welsh for many of his character names, and indeed Arwen and its masculine counterpart Arwyn do have a modest history of use as legitimate Welsh names, deriving from the -wyn suffix ("fair, blessed") plus an intensifying prefix.
        • Avalon
          • Origin:

            Celtic
          • Meaning:

            "island of apples"
          • Description:

            Avalon, an island paradise of Celtic myth and Arthurian legend--it was where King Arthur was taken to recover from his wounds-- and also the colorful capital of the California island of Catalina-- makes a heavenly first name. Actress Rena Sofer and British musician Julian Cope used it for their daughters.
        • Barcelona
          • Origin:

            Place-name
          • Description:

            Attractive but somewhat unwieldy place-name name.
        • Bea
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Beatrice
          • Meaning:

            "she who brings happiness"
          • Description:

            Bea is a former old lady name that's cute again as a short form -- and is now beginning to stand on its own. Bee is a variation that, like Bea, can work as a diminutive for any name that starts with the letter B, or in the middle. Bea actually stood alone on the popularity lists for four years at the beginning of the twentieth century--and it could happen again.
        • Bellamy
          • Origin:

            English and Irish from French
          • Meaning:

            "fine friend"
          • Description:

            Bellamy is emerging as an up-and-coming girls' name, an Irish surname-y riff on the super-popular Bella series of names. While the Bella connection makes Bellamy sound a little trendier and more popular than it really is, we see the name possibly rising through the ranks for both genders in the coming years.
        • Boheme
          • Origin:

            French word name
          • Description:

            "Girls Gone Child" blogger Rebecca Woolf made Boheme a first name when she gave it to one of her twin daughters (the other one's name is Reverie). La Boheme -- "The Bohemian" -- is a Puccini opera that was transmogrified into the modern play Rent. Boheme means a literary or artistic person who lives outside conventional society.
        • Calico
          • Origin:

            English word name
          • Meaning:

            "cotton cloth imported from India; a blotched or spotted animal"
          • Description:

            A word name with fashionable o-ending that has associations with both the homespun fabric and the mottled cat. Alice Cooper named his daughter Calico decades ago.
        • Cantrelle
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "song"
          • Description:

            Vocal name seldom heard, with most elle-ending names these days dropped in favor of the more straightforward Elle and Ella.
        • Cat
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Catherine
          • Meaning:

            "pure"
          • Description:

            May be the most modern, stylish Catherine nickname: more unusual than Kate or Cate, with an animal and word name edge. Cat Power is a trendy folksinger.
        • Catalina
          • Origin:

            Spanish variation of Catherine
          • Meaning:

            "pure"
          • Description:

            This name of a touristed island in sight of Los Angeles makes an attractive and newly stylish variation on the classic Catherine or overused Caitlin.