YET MORE names I adore to the moon and back

  1. Vex
    • Zachariah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew, form of Zechariah
      • Meaning:

        "the Lord has remembered"
      • Description:

        This distinguished name still feels a bit ancient, but with the rise of such former graybeards as Jeremiah and Elijah, it also sounds child-friendly again, as does the Latin-Greek form Zacharias.
    • Zacharias
      • Origin:

        Greek form of Hebrew Zachariah
      • Meaning:

        "the Lord has remembered"
      • Description:

        One of several more venerable names that get to the nickname Zack if you're tired of Zachary. In the New Testament, Zacharias was the husband of Elizabeth and father of John the Baptist.
    • Zadock
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "fair, righteous"
      • Description:

        A biblical name that was used in colonial times, but which has an unpleasant sound to the modern ear.
    • Zeno
      • Origin:

        Anglicized form of Greek Zenon, related to Zeus, king of the gods
      • Description:

        Zeno, the name of two ancient philosophers, has a muscular dynamism that's lightened by its cheerful final vowel, resulting in a kind of offbeat sci-fi feel. Zeno of Citium was the founder of the Stoic school of thought, Zeno of Elea was another early, original Greek thinker, famed for his Paradoxes.
    • Zerrick
      • Origin:

        Modern invented name
      • Description:

        Updates the tired Derek or Eric.
    • Zilla
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "shadow"
      • Description:

        Although this Old Testament name is soft and delicate, it runs the risk of conjuring up the monstrous Godzilla.
    • Zinnia
      • Origin:

        Flower name, from German surname
      • Meaning:

        "Zinn's flower"
      • Description:

        Zinnia is an unusual floral choice with a bit more edge and energy than most and beginning to find its way onto namers' wish lists of botanical possibilities. Named after an eighteenth German botanist called Johann Gottfried Zinn, it appears in Roald Dahl's Matilda as the young protagonist's mother.
    • Ákos
      • Origin:

        Hungarian from Turkish
      • Meaning:

        "white eagle"