Cool Names

Cool names for girls and boys.
  1. Ambrosia
    • Origin:

      Latin, feminine form of Ambrose
    • Meaning:

      "Immortal"
    • Description:

      Ambrosia combines some of the more whimsical qualities of more popular Aurora and Isabella, with a heavenly meaning.
  2. April
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "to open"
    • Description:

      Once the most popular month names, April has been overtaken by June (for girls) and August (for boys), as well as the charmingly old-fashioned May. Literary reference: the heroine of the book and movie Revolutionary Road, and there have been Aprils on Parks and Recreation, Glee, and The Vampire Diaries. Trivia note: comedian Ralphie May named his daughter April June May.
  3. Andrew-Mathew
    • Carmina
      • Catherine
        • Dallas
          • Origin:

            Place-name in Scotland and Texas, and Irish
          • Meaning:

            "skilled"
          • Description:

            Relaxed, laid-back cowboy name with broad appeal and more staying power than you might guess: Dallas has ranked among the Top 1000 boy names in the US since records began in 1880.
        • Davy
          • Ebony
            • Fiona
              • Origin:

                Scottish
              • Meaning:

                "white, fair"
              • Description:

                Fiona entered the American consciousness with the opening of the 1954 Broadway musical Brigadoon, but didn't come onto the U.S. popularity list until 1990.
            • Free
              • Origin:

                Word name
              • Meaning:

                "free"
              • Description:

                One of the classic hippie word names. In the 1970s, actors Barbara Hershey and David Carradine gave this name to their son...who later changed it to Tom.
            • George
              • Origin:

                Greek
              • Meaning:

                "farmer"
              • Description:

                Iconoclasts though we may be, we like Fred, we like Frank, and we like George, which was among the Top 10 from 1830 to 1950, when the number of little Georges started to decline. Solid, strong, royal and saintly, yet friendly and unpretentious, we think that George is in prime position for a comeback, especially since it was chosen by Britain's royal couple.
            • Harlingen
              • Isradora
                • 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.
                • James
                  • Origin:

                    English variation of Jacob, Hebrew
                  • Meaning:

                    "supplanter"
                  • Description:

                    James is one of the classic Anglo-Saxon names, a stalwart through the ages that is more popular—and yes, stylish—than ever today. It recently came out Number 1 in a poll of America's favorite boys' baby names, and is the most common male name, counting people of all ages, in the US.
                • Jamie
                  • Origin:

                    Diminutive of James
                  • Meaning:

                    "supplanter"
                  • Description:

                    Jamie is typical of the relaxed unisex names starting with J that seemed so cool in the sixties after decades of Jeans and Joans, though now pretty tepid. Jaime and even Jamey and Jayme are alternate spellings.
                • John
                  • Origin:

                    Hebrew
                  • Meaning:

                    "God is gracious"
                  • Description:

                    John reigned as the most popular of all boys' Christian names for 400 years, from the time the first Crusaders carried it back to Britain until the 1950s. Then American baby namers finally seemed to tire of this straight-arrow, almost anonymous John Doe of names, replacing it with fancier forms like Jonathan and the imported Sean and Ian.
                • Jude
                  • Origin:

                    Latin diminutive of Judah
                  • Meaning:

                    "praised"
                  • Description:

                    Jude is a modern star, maintaining a steady level of popularity -- but not TOO much popularity -- for more than a decade now. Thank Jude Law and the great Lennon-McCartney song "Hey Jude", double-handedly responsible for propelling Jude up the charts.
                • John Paul
                  • Keith
                    • Origin:

                      Scottish
                    • Meaning:

                      "wood"
                    • Description:

                      Strong but gentle, Keith is one of the Scottish surnames that, along with Douglas, Craig and Bruce, were considered the epitome of cool in the 1960s and early 1970s, when it was a Top 40 choice.