Rare and Unique French Baby Names

  1. Acadia
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "idyllic place"
    • Description:

      Acadia, the French name for Nova Scotia and the name of a gorgeous national park in Maine makes a fresh, rhythmic choice for your little girl. Acadia is an original yet accessible member of the stylish girl names starting with A.
  2. Achille
    • Origin:

      French variation of Achilles
    • Meaning:

      "thin-lipped"
    • Description:

      The French spin on the name of the great Homeric hero with the vulnerable heel seems somewhat more portable into the modern world.
  3. Alexandrine
    • Origin:

      French and German variation of Alexandra
    • Meaning:

      "defending men"
    • Description:

      Alexandra is a name with many international variations, elaborations and short forms, and Alexandrine is one of the more unusual. Another, Alexandrina, was the first name of Queen Victoria.
  4. Aline
    • Origin:

      Variation of Adeline or Aileen
    • Description:

      Aline may have originated as a short form of Adeline in the Middle Ages, but it may also be a variation of the Irish Aileen or Scottish Eileen. Aline dropped off the Top 1000 in the 1950s. Fewer than 40 baby girls were named Aline in the US last year.
  5. Alouette
    • Origin:

      French
    • Meaning:

      "lark"
    • Description:

      Alouette is a sweet Gallic twist in the stylish bird name genre made familiar via the charming French children's song, Alouette, gentile alouette.
  6. Aloyse
    • Ambroise
      • Annette
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "grace"
        • Description:

          Annette is a French diminutive of Ann which was among the first wave of widely-used girls' names from France, now neglected for so long that it's almost starting to feel stylish again.
      • Antonin
        • Origin:

          Czech variation of Antonius
        • Description:

          A current top 25 choice in the Czech Republic (spelt Antonín), this distinguished name has several notable bearers: from French playwright Artaud, to Czech composer Dvořák, to Death Eater Dolohov in the Harry Potter series.
      • Arlette
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "noble, honor"
        • Description:

          Arlette is a French form of the Germanic name Herleva, which was the name of the mother of William the Conqueror. It peaked in France in the mid-1930s, but you might be surprised to learn that in the US, it's only just beginning to catch on now. It entered the US Top 1000 for the first time in 2018, and has dipped in and out in the years since then.
      • Arnaud
        • Origin:

          French variation of Arnold
        • Meaning:

          "ruler, strong as an eagle"
        • Description:

          French given and surname.
      • Augustin
        • Origin:

          Greek variation of August
        • Description:

          This form and its German variant Augusten are moving up fast as the preferred long forms of the trendy Gus.
      • Bernadette
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "brave as a bear"
        • Description:

          Although feminizations ending in "ette" are not particularly popular now, Bernadette is a pleasant, feminine, but strong name that doesn't feel prohibitively dated. And though strongly associated with the saint who saw visions of the Virgin Mary—Saint Bernadette of Lourdes—it is now no longer strictly inhabiting the Catholic diocese.
      • Berthe
        • Blanche
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "white"
          • Description:

            Blanche, which originated as a nickname for a pale blonde and then became associated with the notion of purity, was in style a century ago, ranking in the double digits until 1920. She then had to fight the stereotype of faded Southern belle, a la Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire and Blanche Devereaux in TV's Golden Girls. Now all three of the Golden Girls--Blanche, Rose and Dorothy--could be ready for revival, with Blanche sounding like a stronger, simpler alternative to Bianca.
        • Brigitte
          • Origin:

            French variation of Brighid
          • Meaning:

            "strength or exalted one"
          • Description:

            Brigitte is the French version of the ancient Irish Brighid long associated with 1950s sex symbol Brigitte Bardot. If you want to pronounce Brigitte the French way, it's brih-ZHEET.
        • Clairette
          • Claude
            • Origin:

              French from Latin
            • Meaning:

              "lame; enclosure"
            • Description:

              Claude is a soft-spoken French name that conjures up the pastel colors of Monet and harmonies of Debussy. In France, it is used for girls as well, in fact in the Tracy Chevalier novel Lady and the Unicorn, the protagonist is a female Claude.
          • Claudette
            • Origin:

              French, feminine variation of Claude
            • Meaning:

              "lame; enclosure"
            • Description:

              Once seen as a dated French Claudette-Colbert feminization, along with Annette and Paulette, we can see Claudette moving into a more plausible Colette-Cosette arena. While some may be put off by the common "lame" meaning, some etymologists theorize that the name may relate to the word for enclosure or clause, an alternate meaning that may appeal to a child with a form of this otherwise-appealing name.
          • Claudine
            • Origin:

              French feminine variation of Claude
            • Description:

              There are much chicer versions of this name today, such as Claudie, Claudia, or Claude itself. Claudine is a name wobbling on the edge of extinction.