San Francisco

Hyper local place names for lovers of the city by the bay.
  1. Ashbury
    • Bay
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "berry"
      • Description:

        One of the most usable of the pleasant, newly adopted nature/water names (like Lake and Ocean), especially in middle position.
    • Berkeley
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "where birches grow"
      • Description:

        The Brits say BARK-lee, but we pronounce it the same as the name of the California college: either way it's quite pretentious and of another era.
    • Brannan
      • Bryant
        • Origin:

          Variation of Brian, Irish
        • Meaning:

          "strong, virtuous, and honorable"
        • Description:

          Bryant has a longer history as a first name in the US than its father name Brian, ranking among the Top 1000 since the list began in 1880 while Brian only jumped on in 1925.
      • Clay
        • Origin:

          English word name; diminutive of Clayton
        • Description:

          Clay is a rich, earthy one-syllable name with a southern-inflected handsome-rogue image, featured on soap operas and reality TV. Its longer forms are Clayton and Clayborne.
      • Coit
        • Delancey
          • Origin:

            French
          • Meaning:

            "from Lancey"
          • Description:

            This is an energetic dance of an Irish surname, great for both genders. Could also be spelled Delancy.
        • Delores
          • Origin:

            Variation of Dolores
          • Description:

            See DOLORES.
        • Eddy
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Edward
          • Meaning:

            "wealthy guardian"
          • Description:

            Eddy, recently used by Celine Dion for one of her twin boys, was chosen to honor Eddy Marnay, who produced her first five records. Though less common a nickname for Edward than Eddie, Eddy is used more often on its own.
        • Ellis
          • Origin:

            English surname derived from Elijah or Elias or Welsh
          • Meaning:

            "benevolent"
          • Description:

            Ellis is a former Old Man Name turned gender-neutral choice for the 21st century. It's one of the less used names in the currently popular El-family.
        • Fillmore
          • Francisco
            • Origin:

              Spanish, Portuguese
            • Meaning:

              "free man"
            • Description:

              Francisco is one of the more popular Spanish names for boys in the US, which is unsurprising given its popularity back in Spain and Portugal as well as Latin America, coupled with its classic status. It also has a cool hipster vibe to it, given the reputation of the city of San Francisco.
          • Geary
            • Grove
              • Origin:

                Nature name
              • Meaning:

                "grove of trees"
              • Description:

                If you find Grover too fusty and furry, this is a much cooler-sounding alternative.
            • Harrison
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "son of Harry"
              • Description:

                Harrison, a name made viable by Harrison Ford, is increasingly popular with parents who want an H name that's more formal than Harry or Hank but doesn't veer into the stiff Huntington-Harrington territory.
            • Hayes
              • Origin:

                English surname and nature name
              • Meaning:

                "hedged area"
              • Description:

                One of those simple, straightforward English surnames -- and with a presidential pedigree -- that's easy to translate into a first. It was recently chosen by both Kevin Costner and Jessica Alba for their sons, which can likely be credited for its spike in popularity in the past few years. Surname names and nature names like Hayes, which qualifies on both counts, along with occupational names all make up the new generation of stylish English names for boys that go far beyond Harry and Edward.
            • Howard
              • Origin:

                German or English
              • Meaning:

                "high guardian or brave heart"
              • Description:

                Howard, once hugely popular -- in the Top 50 from the 1870s to early 1950s, hitting Number 24 in 1920 -- has been stuck in Dad-Grandad limbo for decades, but is showing some signs of stirring back to life. Along with such formerly-fusty names as George and Harold, Howard may soon feel baby-appropriate, perhaps with the short form Ward.
            • Jackson
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "son of Jack"
              • Description:

                Jackson is one of those names that's much more popular than you think, coming in near the top of our annual Playground Analysis, which ranks names by grouping all their spellings together. There were nearly 17,000 baby boys named Jackson -- along Jaxon, Jaxson, Jaxxon, Jaxen, Jaxyn, Jaxsen, and Jaxsyn -- which counted together makes it the Number 3 boys' name.
            • Lombard