Botanical Names for Girls

If you want an uncommon flower or botanical name for your little girl, some are more international, or are names that you didn't think of as being botanically based.
  1. Aster
    • Origin:

      English; Amharic
    • Meaning:

      "star"
    • Description:

      This is a fresh new addition to the botanical list; comedian Gilbert Gottfried made it a real bouquet when he named his daughter Lily Aster. And the name of the little girl on television's Dexter sounds like Aster, but is actually spelled Astor, which brings it more high society name. Aster relates to the Greek word for star. In Ethiopia, Aster is pronounced "ah-STAIR", and is the Amharic variation of Biblical Esther.
  2. Alyssum
    • Carlina
      • Celandine
        • Origin:

          English botanical name
        • Description:

          A botanical name belonging to a small yellow flower in the poppy family. The word ultimately derives from chelidon, the Ancient Greek for "swallow (bird)".
      • Clary
        • Calluna
          • Cydonia
            • Daphne
              • Origin:

                Greek
              • Meaning:

                "laurel tree, bay tree"
              • Description:

                In Greek mythology, Daphne was the nymph daughter of Peneus, a river god. Peneus saved Daphne from Apollo’s romantic obsessions by transforming her into a laurel tree. It is from this myth that the plant genus daphne, which contains the laurel species, gets its name.
            • Edelweiss
              • Origin:

                Flower name, from German
              • Meaning:

                "noble white"
              • Description:

                Edelweiss, made famous by the Rogers and Hammerstein song in "The Sound of Music", is a rare female name.
            • Erica
              • Origin:

                Norse, feminine form of Eric
              • Meaning:

                "eternal ruler"
              • Description:

                The straightforward Erica is a Norse feminization that was long associated with the complex, mega-popular character Erica Kane, played by Susan Lucci for decades on the soap opera All My Children. Used in Scandinavia since the early eighteenth century, where it was usually spelled Erika, it was in the Top 50 girls' list in the USA in the 1970s and eighties.
            • Gentiana
              • Heather
                • Origin:

                  English botanical name
                • Description:

                  This flower name was one of the most popular in her class in the seventies and eighties (in the 1989 movie Heathers, every snobby girl in the high school clique bore that name). Now, though still pretty and evocative of the Scottish moors, it has faded in favor of other purplish blooms, having fallen out of the Top 1000 after having been as high as Number 3 in 1975, when it was given to close to 25,000 girls.
              • Juniper
                • Origin:

                  Latin tree name
                • Meaning:

                  "young"
                • Description:

                  Juniper is a fresh-feeling nature name -- it's a small evergreen shrub -- with lots of energy. A new favorite of fashionable parents, Juniper joins such other tree and shrub names as Hazel, Acacia, and Willow.
              • Malva
                • Origin:

                  Greek
                • Meaning:

                  "slender, delicate"
                • Description:

                  Your zany neighbor, the one who's a potter and has five cats.
              • Nymphaea
                • 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.
                • Quince
                  • Origin:

                    Latin
                  • Meaning:

                    "applelike fruit"
                  • Description:

                    'Q' names are hot, and this is an intriguing fruit name that could be used for a girl or boy. The quince often appears in Greek myth, in tales of Aphrodite, Paris and Atalanta. Can also be a nickname for Quincy.
                • Rosemary
                  • Origin:

                    Latin or English
                  • Meaning:

                    "dew of the sea, or rosemary (herb)"
                  • Description:

                    Despite appearances, Rosemary is not a "smoosh" name, not even a traditional one. The name derives from two Latin terms "Ros" meaning ‘dew’ and "Marinus" "meaning "of the sea". The plant was termed ‘dew of the sea’ due to its salty texture and its ability to thrive in coastal climes. Only after the Middle Ages did the English names of Rose and Mary become interchanged with the name Rosmarinus and give us the modern name we use today.
                • Sage
                  • Origin:

                    Herb name; Latin
                  • Meaning:

                    "wise"
                  • Description:

                    Sage is an evocatively fragrant herbal name that also connotes wisdom, giving it a double advantage. It entered the Top 1000 at about the same time for both genders in the early 1990s, but it has pulled ahead for the girls. Toni Collette named her daughter Sage Florence.
                • Sanziana