Baby Names That Mean Flower
200 baby names meaning flower — with origins, popularity, and audio pronunciation on every name.
Looking for a name that means flower? Here are 200 baby names whose meaning carries the sense of flower. Each links to its full page with a sourced meaning and audio pronunciation.
Girl Names
Violet#13 in the U.S.The violet flower; purple-colored; from Latin violaLily#18 in the U.S.Lily flower; symbol of purity and innocenceChloe#23 in the U.S.Blooming; young green shoot; new growth in springLillian#57 in the U.S.Lily flower; purity — from Latin lilium (lily), via the name LilyLeilani#60 in the U.S.Heavenly flower; royal child of heaven — from Hawaiian lei (flower garland, child) + lani (heavDaisy#75 in the U.S.Day's eye — from Old English dæges ēage (day's eye), describing how the flower opens at dawnLiliana#78 in the U.S.Lily flower; pure — extended Italian/Spanish form of Lily, from Latin liliumRose#114 in the U.S.The rose flower; from Latin rosa, but also related to Old High German hros (horse) or hroth (faRosalie#171 in the U.S.Little rose — French diminutive of Rose, from Latin rosa (rose flower)Jasmine#206 in the U.S.Jasmine flowerZara#212 in the U.S.Princess; blooming flower; from Arabic Zahra (flower, blossom) or Hebrew Sara/Zara (princess)Dahlia#215 in the U.S.Dahl's flower — the dahlia plant, named after botanist Anders DahlCataleya#238 in the U.S.A tropical orchid; associated with beauty, love, and strengthLilly#252 in the U.S.Lily flower; symbol of purity and innocenceTalia#265 in the U.S.Dew of heaven; blooming, flourishingKhloe#272 in the U.S.Blooming; young green shoot; variant spelling of Chloe from Greek khloeAzalea#278 in the U.S.Dry; relating to the azalea flower, named from Greek azaleos (dry)Rosie#283 in the U.S.Little rose; the rose flower, symbol of love and beautyPoppy#292 in the U.S.The poppy flower; from Latin papaverFlorence#391 in the U.S.From Latin Florentia, meaning flourishing or prosperous, derived from florens (blooming); also Briar#400 in the U.S.From Old English brær or brer meaning a prickly shrub, especially a wild rose bush; used as a gLilliana#446 in the U.S.Elaborated form of Lily or Lillian, from Latin 'lilium' meaning the lily flower, a symbol of puAlyssa#453 in the U.S.Variant of Alicia/Alice, from Old High German 'adal' (noble) and 'heit' (kind, type); also connKataleya#459 in the U.S.Variant of Cattleya, a genus of orchid flowers named after English botanist William Cattley; alAnahi#482 in the U.S.From Guaraní mythology — Anahí was a young woman transformed into the ceibo flower, symbol of AJazlyn#537 in the U.S.Modern American blend of Jasmine (from Persian yasmin meaning 'jasmine flower') and the popularZahra#540 in the U.S.From Arabic Zahra, derived from the root z-h-r meaning 'to bloom' or 'to shine,' giving meaningLilian#560 in the U.S.Derived from Latin lilium ('lily') or a variant of Lily; the lily has long symbolized purity anMarigold#590 in the U.S.From the flower name, itself combining Mary (the Virgin Mary) and gold, referring to the goldenFlora#607 in the U.S.From Latin flora meaning 'flower' or 'flowering,' derived from flos/floris ('flower'); the nameRosalia#609 in the U.S.From Latin rosalia, the name of an ancient Roman festival of roses (dies rosae), derived from rVioleta#641 in the U.S.Spanish and Romanian form of Violet, from Latin viola meaning the violet flower; the flower namZariyah#645 in the U.S.An elaborated American spelling variant of Zaria or Zariya, possibly from Arabic zahr meaning fThalia#648 in the U.S.From Greek thallein meaning to blossom or to flourish; name of the Muse of comedy and of one ofRosa#653 in the U.S.From Latin rosa meaning the rose flower; used across Romance languages as the feminine given naHana#658 in the U.S.In Japanese, hana means flower or blossom; in Arabic and Hebrew, a variant of Hannah meaning grLillie#676 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Lily, from the Latin lilium meaning the lily flower; a symbol of purity andRosalina#681 in the U.S.Spanish and Italian elaboration of Rosa, from Latin rosa meaning rose, with the diminutive -linLeilany#696 in the U.S.Heavenly flower; from Hawaiian lei (wreath of flowers) and lani (heaven, sky, royalty), a variaJazmin#710 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Jasmine, from the Persian yasmin (یاسمین) or Arabic yasamin, the name of thLaylani#769 in the U.S.Heavenly wreath or garland from heaven; a blend of the Arabic Layla meaning night and the HawaiDalia#800 in the U.S.Branch or fate; from the Hebrew Daliyah meaning gentle, drooping branch, or alternatively linkeZainab#810 in the U.S.Fragrant flowering tree or beauty; from the Arabic Zaynab, referring to a fragrant flowering trIndigo#854 in the U.S.From the Greek indikon (Indian dye), via Latin indicum and Spanish indigo, referring to the deeLilia#859 in the U.S.Elaborated form of Lily, from the Latin Lilium and Greek leirion, the white lily flower — a symRosalyn#888 in the U.S.Beautiful rose; English form of Rosalind, influenced by rosa (rose) though the Germanic root isLilianna#891 in the U.S.Elaborated form of Lily or Lilia, from Latin lilium (lily flower), combined with the -anna suffViolette#894 in the U.S.French diminutive of Violette, from Latin viola (violet flower); the violet symbolized modesty,Lilyana#897 in the U.S.Lily; variant of Lilliana, combining lily (the flower) with the -ana suffix meaning grace or faCattleya#905 in the U.S.A genus of tropical orchids, named after English horticulturist William Cattley (1788–1835)Zaria#945 in the U.S.Derived from Slavic Zarya meaning dawn, aurora, or morning glow, and also used as a name connecRosalee#954 in the U.S.Variant of Rosalie or Rosalie, from Latin rosa meaning rose, combined with the diminutive suffiYasmin#959 in the U.S.From Persian yasamin and Arabic yasmin, both meaning jasmine, the fragrant white flowering planLeylani#971 in the U.S.Variant of Leilani, from Hawaiian lei meaning garland or flower wreath and lani meaning sky, heRoselyn#979 in the U.S.Variant of Rosalind or Roseline, combining Latin rosa meaning rose and the suffix -lind from GeJazmine#993 in the U.S.Phonetic spelling variant of Jasmine, from Persian yasamin and Arabic yasmin meaning jasmine, tJaslyn#996 in the U.S.A blended name combining Jasmine (from Persian yasamin meaning jasmine flower) with the -lyn suAntonia#1052 in the U.S.Beyond price, priceless; feminine of Antonius (Antonio/Anthony), from the Roman family name AntXochitl#1105 in the U.S.Flower; from Nahuatl xochitl (flower, blossom)Ayana#1107 in the U.S.Beautiful flower; eternal blossom; from Swahili/Somali and Cherokee traditions both using AyanaSusan#1136 in the U.S.Lily; from Hebrew Shoshannah (lily, rose), via Greek Sousanna and Latin SusannaJazlynn#1148 in the U.S.Modern compound of Jazz/Jasmine (Persian yasmin: jasmine flower) and -lynn (Welsh: lake)Ayanna#1174 in the U.S.Beautiful flower; eternal blossom; double-n spelling variant of Ayana, from Swahili/Cherokee trZhuri#1178 in the U.S.Flower; possibly from Swahili or Zulu origin; exact etymology uncertainAiyana#1179 in the U.S.Eternal blossom; ai- spelling variant of Ayana/Ayanna, from Cherokee and Swahili traditions meaViola#1190 in the U.S.Violet; from Latin viola (the violet flower)Yasmine#1207 in the U.S.Jasmine flower; from Persian yasmin (the jasmine plant, Jasminum officinale)Zahara#1208 in the U.S.Flower; radiance; to bloom; from Arabic zahara (to flower, to shine) and Hebrew zohar (radianceZaira#1233 in the U.S.Radiance; flower; from Arabic zahra (flower, radiance, to bloom) — a variant of Zara or ZahraKalia#1254 in the U.S.The most beautiful; bud; from Hawaiian kalia (the most beautiful) or Greek kalia (good, fair) —Fern#1261 in the U.S.The fern plant; from Old English fearn (the fern — a flowerless vascular plant that reproduces Zinnia#1349 in the U.S.The zinnia flower, named for botanist Johann ZinnHeather#1352 in the U.S.The heather plant, a flowering shrub of the Scottish moorsJasmin#1355 in the U.S.Jasmine flower; gift from GodKelani#1356 in the U.S.Heavenly flower; also a river name in Sri LankaSusanna#1360 in the U.S.Lily flower, graceful as a lilyCattaleya#1380 in the U.S.The cattleya orchid, queen of orchidsZarah#1391 in the U.S.Blooming flower, brightness, radianceLailani#1430 in the U.S.Night flower of heaven; heavenly nightbloomVioletta#1462 in the U.S.Little violet flower; small purple flowerYuri#1491 in the U.S.LilyEmryn#1492 in the U.S.Modern coined name, likely adapted from the Welsh Emrys (form of Ambrose, 'immortal') and shapeRosalynn#1497 in the U.S.A variant of Rosalind/Rosaline, combining the Latin 'rosa' (rose) with a second element; populaCalla#1514 in the U.S.Beauty; also a flower name (calla lily)Roselynn#1531 in the U.S.Blend of Rose and the suffix -lynnCamellia#1539 in the U.S.from the camellia flower, which was named after the Moravian Jesuit botanist Georg Joseph KamelZaynab#1548 in the U.S.from Arabic, traditionally the name of a fragrant flowering plant; also associated with beautyLillianna#1550 in the U.S.An elaborated spelling of Liliana/Lillian, derived from the flower name 'lily' (Latin 'lilium',Alissa#1553 in the U.S.A variant spelling of Alyssa, linked to the flower alyssum (from Greek a- "not" + lyssa "madnesLilieth#1579 in the U.S.a modern variant spelling, likely influenced by Lily and Lilith; not an established traditionalKalina#1605 in the U.S.From Slavic 'kalina', the viburnum (guelder rose) tree.Lotus#1663 in the U.S.Lotus flowerLilyanna#1697 in the U.S.Modern blend of Lily (flower) and Anna (from Hebrew Hannah, 'grace'); a variant of Liliana.Yasmina#1745 in the U.S.JasmineDayami#1771 in the U.S.Modern Cuban feminine coinage; meaning not reliably established (popularly but unreliably linkeRaizy#1779 in the U.S.Rose (diminutive of Raizel)Yazmin#1785 in the U.S.Jasmine flowerShoshana#1796 in the U.S.LilyZyra#1797 in the U.S.Modern variant of Zara/Zahra ('flower, blossom, radiance')Flor#1839 in the U.S.FlowerZella#1858 in the U.S.Invented English name that arose in the 19th century; no established lexical meaningIyanna#1881 in the U.S.Beautiful flowerZariya#1905 in the U.S.Blooming flower; radiant (variant of Zahra)Yasmeen#1933 in the U.S.JasmineBlossom#1952 in the U.S.English nature/word name meaning 'flower' or 'bloom', from Old English 'blostm/blostma'. PopulaMei#1960 in the U.S.Chinese name meaning 'beautiful' or 'plum blossom', depending on the character used.Kaleia#2031 in the U.S.From Hawaiian 'ka' (the) + 'lei' (garland of flowers), meaning 'the flower wreath' or by extensIyana#2055 in the U.S.Beautiful flowerPrimrose#2106 in the U.S.First roseRaizel#2126 in the U.S.'Little rose / rose', from German Rose + Yiddish diminutive -el; Yiddish equivalent of Hebrew SLilyann#2159 in the U.S.LilyAiyanna#2228 in the U.S.eternal blossom, forever floweringRosanna#2259 in the U.S.rose combined with grace, gracious roseRen#2272 in the U.S.lotus, water lilyRosella#2335 in the U.S.little rose, diminutive of roseSusana#2338 in the U.S.lily, roseSusie#2339 in the U.S.lilyRosalinda#2395 in the U.S.pretty rose, tender roseMarguerite#2415 in the U.S.pearl, or daisy flowerNara#2491 in the U.S.Polygenetic name with no single verified meaning; the 'Sotho / pomegranate flower' attribution Jazmyn#2513 in the U.S.jasmine flowerSuzanne#2547 in the U.S.LilyLeiana#2568 in the U.S.Modern blend built on Hawaiian lei 'garland, flower wreath' with an -ana ending; no fixed tradiYolanda#2591 in the U.S.VioletXareni#2646 in the U.S.commonly glossed 'beautiful flower' or 'lady/princess of the forest,' but etymology is disputedFiorella#2695 in the U.S.Little flower.Susannah#2734 in the U.S.LilyBlimy#2748 in the U.S.FlowerNella#2785 in the U.S.FlowerAnthonella#2815 in the U.S.FlowerSuzanna#2839 in the U.S.LilyLillyana#2862 in the U.S.LilyRhoda#2870 in the U.S.RoseAntoinette#2882 in the U.S.FlowerRosaleigh#2910 in the U.S.RoseRosaline#3000 in the U.S.From Latin rosa (rose) combined with Germanic lind (gentle, soft, tender), or simply 'pretty roSakura#3001 in the U.S.Cherry blossom (桜); in Japanese culture a universal symbol of beauty, renewal, and impermanenceVianna#3006 in the U.S.Modern blended name combining a Vi- prefix (from Violet, Vivian: life) with Anna (Hebrew: graceXaria#3007 in the U.S.Modern invented name, likely derived from Zara or Xara; may carry associations of 'princess' (ABlima#3017 in the U.S.From Yiddish blim or blume (flower, blossom), ultimately from Middle High German bluome; means Lili#3028 in the U.S.Variant of Lily, from Latin 'lilium' (lily flower), itself from Greek 'leirion'; also linked toYesly#3070 in the U.S.A modern Spanish-influenced name, possibly a diminutive or variant of Yesenia (an Arabic-originBloom#3077 in the U.S.Flower, blossom; to flourish and thrive; from Old Norse blom and Old English blomaBryar#3080 in the U.S.Thorny shrub or wild rose bush; from Old English brær or brier, referring to a prickly hedging Deysi#3122 in the U.S.Phonetic Spanish spelling of Daisy, itself from Old English 'dæges ēage' meaning 'day's eye,' rLelani#3136 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Leilani, a Hawaiian name from 'lei' (garland, flower wreath, child) and 'laLillia#3138 in the U.S.Elaborated form of Lily or Lilia, from Latin 'lilium' meaning the lily flower, itself from GreeMaleni#3143 in the U.S.Likely a phonetic variant or blend of Melanie (Greek: 'black, dark') and/or Leilani (Hawaiian: Mehlani#3146 in the U.S.Modern creative elaboration, likely a phonetic variant of Leilani (Hawaiian: 'heavenly flower')Posie#3151 in the U.S.As a diminutive of Josephine, it carries the Hebrew meaning 'God will add'. As a standalone namZaylani#3162 in the U.S.A modern coined name, possibly influenced by Zara (Arabic: 'flower/dawn') and Lani (Hawaiian: 'Jaci#3185 in the U.S.From Tupi-Guaraní jaci meaning 'moon'; also functions as a short form of Jacinda (Greek: hyacinJaziyah#3234 in the U.S.Modern American coinage pairing the Jaz- of Jasmine and jazz with the melodic -iyah endingLillyann#3243 in the U.S.Compound of Lilly, the flower name from Latin lilium, and Ann, from Hebrew Channah, 'grace'Mai#3245 in the U.S.Apricot blossom; from Vietnamese mai, the yellow flower of the lunar new yearMelrose#3248 in the U.S.From the Scottish town of Melrose, from Brythonic words usually read as 'bare moor' or 'bare prPoppi#3251 in the U.S.The poppy flower; from Old English popæg, ultimately from Latin papaverRosabella#3254 in the U.S.Beautiful rose; a compound of Latin rosa, 'rose', and bella, 'beautiful'Azayla#3272 in the U.S.Modern American coinage blending the sound of the azalea flower with the trend name ZaylaEri#3286 in the U.S.A Japanese girls' name whose meaning depends on its kanji — common writings combine e, 'blessinRosy#3312 in the U.S.Rose-like, blushing; the English adjective from rose, Latin rosa, used as a name and as a pet fCatalaya#3337 in the U.S.Variant of Cataleya, from Cattleya, the orchid genus named for English horticulturist William CLilibeth#3349 in the U.S.Compound of Lily and Beth (from Elizabeth, 'God is my oath'), paralleling the royal nickname LiAzaleah#3387 in the U.S.The azalea flower — from Greek azaleos, 'dry' — with the -ah ending of biblical namesCamelia#3392 in the U.S.The camellia flower; single-l spelling used in Spanish and Romanian, from the genus Linnaeus naJazaiyah#3409 in the U.S.Modern American coinage pairing the Jaz- of Jasmine and jazz with the layered -aiyah endingKattaleya#3413 in the U.S.K-styled variant of Cataleya, from Cattleya, the orchid genus named for horticulturist William Rosetta#3429 in the U.S.Little rose; Italian diminutive of RosaAzucena#3447 in the U.S.White lily, Madonna lily; from Spanish azucena, borrowed from Arabic as-susanaKahlia#3459 in the U.S.Modern h-styled variant of Kalia — in Hawaiian, the name of a flowering tree, with 'beloved' a Zayra#3501 in the U.S.Variant of Zaira/Zahra — Arabic 'blooming, radiant flower' — also linked to a Voltaire-coined lEllarose#3517 in the U.S.Fused compound of Ella — Germanic 'all, other', or a short form of Eleanor — and Rose, the flowPosey#3549 in the U.S.A small bunch of flowers; from posy, originally a short verse (poesy) given with flowers — alsoBellarose#3575 in the U.S.Fused compound of Bella — Italian 'beautiful' — and Rose, the flower from Latin rosa: 'beautifuDeisy#3582 in the U.S.Spanish phonetic spelling of Daisy — the flower whose name means 'day's eye', from Old EnglishLilliann#3604 in the U.S.Elaborated spelling of Lillian — the lily flower (Latin lilium) blended with Ann ('grace'), or Lilyanne#3605 in the U.S.Fused compound of Lily — the flower, Latin lilium — and Anne, 'grace', from Hebrew ChannahMali#3609 in the U.S.Flower; from Thai mali, the jasmine flower — also the West African country and a short form of Roisin#3624 in the U.S.Little rose; from Irish ros, 'rose', plus a diminutive — Róisín Dubh, 'little dark rose', a poeDelphine#3651 in the U.S.From Latin Delphina, 'woman of Delphi' or 'dolphin' — linked to the larkspur flower (delphiniumLeilanni#3671 in the U.S.Double-n spelling of Leilani — Hawaiian 'heavenly flowers' or 'royal child', from lei, 'garlandEmrys#3705 in the U.S.Welsh form of Ambrose — from Greek ambrosios, 'immortal' — traditionally male, used for girlsJaslynn#3713 in the U.S.Modern blend of Jas/Jasmine (Persian yasamin, 'jasmine flower') with -lynn, 'lake'Rhodes#3730 in the U.S.From the Greek island of Rhodes (linked to rhodon, 'rose') and an English surname, 'dweller by Sayuri#3734 in the U.S.From Japanese sa, 'small', plus yuri, 'lily' — 'small lily'
Boy Names
Lian#428 in the U.S.Chinese given name with multiple possible characters: one meaning lotus flower or graceful, anoRhodes#575 in the U.S.Where roses grow; an English surname derived from the Greek Rhodos, name of the island meaning Briar#686 in the U.S.A thorny or prickly shrub; from Old English braer or briar (wild rose, thorny bush)Bryer#704 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Briar, from Old English braer or brer, referring to a thorny or prickly plaTony#784 in the U.S.Priceless or inestimable; a short form of Anthony, from the Roman family name Antonius, possiblRen#1145 in the U.S.Lotus; love; from Japanese ren (lotus, water lily) and Chinese rén (benevolence, humaneness)Indigo#1629 in the U.S.A word name for the blue-violet color and dye, from Greek indikon "Indian substance," i.e. the Antony#1771 in the U.S.FlowerKairav#2403 in the U.S.White lotus; moon; from Sanskrit kairava (the white lotus, Nymphaea lotus) — the night-bloomingAntoni#2552 in the U.S.FlowerAntwan#2553 in the U.S.FlowerKanon#2967 in the U.S.Flower, blossomFlorian#3230 in the U.S.Flowering, blossoming; from Latin Florianus, a derivative of flos, 'flower'Jaylan#3237 in the U.S.Variant of Jaylen/Jalen, the modern American blend of Jay with the -len ending, popularized by Marshal#3304 in the U.S.One-l spelling of Marshall, from a Frankish title meaning 'horse servant' that rose to mean com






