Future

Names I Like~
  1. Astoria
    • Origin:

      Place name
    • Description:

      Long more associated with the New York Waldorf- hotel and the neighborhood in Queens than as a baby name, Astoria is finally beginning to emerge from their shadow and find favor with parents looking to move beyond Brooklyn. The name Astoria is drawn from the surname of titan of industry John Jacob Astor, theorized to mean "hawk."
  2. Coe
    • Origin:

      English surname
    • Meaning:

      "jackdaw"
    • Description:

      In keeping with other short names like PO/POE and BO, Coe is a surname that could easily move into first place. It has a sports hero factor as well, in Olympic runner Sebastian Coe--who later became a Member of Parliament.
  3. Cecil
    • Dariel
      • Origin:

        Feminine variation of Darrell, French
      • Meaning:

        "dear one, beloved"
      • Description:

        Dariel is one of many similar forms and variations of different names—Dara, Dariela, Daria and Darya—that are all unusual and pretty if not quite authentic-feeling.
    • Jordyn
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Jordan
      • Meaning:

        "flowing down"
      • Description:

        This variation of Jordan entered the Top 1000 in 1989. Jordyn as well as Jordan trended throughout the 90s and early 2000s, but are beginning to fall slightly on the girls' side. While the Jordan spelling reached the highest point in popularity out of the 2, making it into the Top 50 in the late 90s and early 2000s, today Jordyn has taken the lead.
    • Kaylon
      • Larkin
        • Origin:

          Irish
        • Meaning:

          "rough, fierce"
        • Description:

          While Larkin takes this name from girlish bird to boyish surname, there are actually more female Larkins these days than male, and it's a name that works as well for either gender.
      • Nouvel
        • Origin:

          French
        • Meaning:

          "new"
        • Description:

          Shot to fame as the middle name of Brangelina's daughter Shiloh Nouvel, after French architect Jean Nouvel.
      • Odessa
        • Origin:

          Ukrainian place-name
        • Description:

          Odessa, a Ukrainian port city, was given its name by Catherine the Great, who was inspired by Homer's Odyssey. It would make an original and intriguing choice.
      • Prym
        • Saylor
          • Origin:

            Surname-name or spelling variation of Sailor
          • Description:

            Saylor jumped into the Top 1000 in 2013 and is given to three times as many girls as the Sailor version. That may be because Saylor feels more like a name and less like an occupation or a word. Its spelling near-echoes the hugely popular Taylor, plus Saylor is a traditional surname in its own right. Recorded in the medieval times in Germany, it's related to the word seil which means rope and was an occupational name for a ropemaker, which also relates to sailor.