Name Help: BirdsName Help is a series at Appellation Mountain. Every week, one reader’s name questions will be discussed.

We’re relying on thoughtful comments from the community to help expectant parents narrow down their name decisions. Thank you in advance for sharing your insight!

Daphne writes:

We inadvertently named our two children names that have loose connections to birds.

Minerva is the goddess of wisdom, often represented by an owl. Odette is the white swan in Swan Lake.

I’m expecting our third child. If it’s a boy there is a family name already on tap. If it’s a girl I’d like to continue with bird names. The only name I’ve found that I like is Meadowlark. I first heard of it when the basketball player died. (Note from Abby: what an amazing! name. Here’s a little more about the basketball player.) My husband thinks of it as a boy name and doesn’t really like it. He also thinks it’s too clunky. Besides it is a bird and not bird-related like the other names.

How do I even look up names that are connected to birds but not birds themselves? Tall order I know.
Thank you in advance.

Hi Daphne –

What a fun accidental theme! And you’ve chosen such great names for your daughters.

This one proved tough to research. And yet, all you need is a plausible connection to a bird, so that’s much more flexible than trying to choose an actual bird name.

So we need a name related to a bird, and it also has to:

  • Seem generally familiar. The brown-capped rosy finch feels a little too obscure, even if some great names might connect to the bird. (To be clear, I didn’t find any.)
  • Appeal to many. Owls and swans both claim positive associations.
  • Pair well with Minerva and Odette.
  • Rank low on the popularity charts. After all, Minevera and Odette qualify as relatively rare.

I’ll start with my best suggestions, but I know readers will have some great ideas, too.

Adelie – Names like Amelie and Elodie feel vaguely French but easily accessible in English. Adelie gives me pause because it’s easily misheard as Natalie. And yet it’s a gorgeous name! The Adelie penguin lives on the Antarctic coast. They’re named for Adelie Dumont d’Urville, wife of French explorer Jacques Dumont d’Urville, who first encountered the Adelie penguins. One other concern: Adelie and Odette share similar sounds.

Lina – I searched for books about birds, and stumbled on a 1955 Newberry Medal winner called The Wheel on the School. I’ve never read it, but there’s something intriguing about the plot. A group of children work to bring storks back to their village. Too obscure? Maybe, but Minerva, Odette and Lina match nicely. One other thought: Carolina, as in the Carolina Wren. Except that feels a little too literal!

Luscinia – Pliny the Elder used the word luscinia to refer to nightingales and their cousins way back in the first century AD. It remains part of the scientific name for nightingales to this day. No one is using Luscinia as a given name, and yet, it sounds like it should be one, right? It would shorten nicely to Lucy and Lou, and could fit right in with Olivia and Sophia and all of those ends with -ia names for girls.

Paloma – In Spanish, Paloma means dove. That tiptoes close to a literal bird name, something you’d like to avoid. And yet, it doesn’t feel like a literal bird name – unless your family speaks Spanish. It sounds like a sister name for Minerva and Odette. Plus, doves stands up well to swans and owls in terms of symbolism. Wisdom, grace, and peace.

Pavonine – Feline refers to cats, canine to dogs, and pavonine to peacocks. Like Luscinia, no one is using Pavonine as a given name. But there’s potential.

Philomela – There’s a gory story of things gone very wrong behind this pretty name. In Greek myth, Philomela suffers terribly, until the gods take pity and turn her into a nightingale.

Sephora – Visit any mall in America, and there’s almost certainly a Sephora selling make-up. Turns out that the name comes from the Hebrew Tzipporah – bird. No specific bird, just bird. That’s not exactly what you had in mind, which is okay, because I’m not sure if Sephora would wear well on a child today.

Sibyl – Do famous birds factor into your thinking? In Bell, Book, and Candle, Mrs. De Passe’s parrot answered to Sibyl. Again, this probably feels too obscure.

Overall, I think Paloma makes the strongest choice, with Luscinia and Adelie not far behind.

One last thought: I combed through lists of famous ornithologists, like this one at Ranker. But nothing really stood out. Any scientists out there? Or science educators? I feel like there might be something I’ve overlooked!

Let’s throw this open to everyone, because, readers, I know you’ll come up with some brilliant ideas. What are your favorite avian-inspired appellations?

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

You May Also Like:

What do you think?

57 Comments

  1. My very first thought was Wren which I think goes so well with your other daughters’ names. I also love Lark and several others that were suggested such as Seraphina and Jemima! Also a suggestion, if you were going to go the route of Branwen which was suggested as well, you could alter it to Bronwyn which I think has a much softer sound to it. That is our daughter’s name also and I love it. Good luck with your choices!

    1. Bronwen and Branwen have different meanings, if you are looking for the bird connection. Bronwen means white breast in Welsh; Branwen means white raven.

  2. I second the choice of Seraphina (though Sarafina was how the character spelled it) or Lenore. Literary names FTW!

  3. Colombe. It means dove in French and is a name here, although uncommon. I love it with your sibset:

    Minerva, Odette and Colombe

  4. I first found the name Zenaida while going through a field guide to birds. It’s a genus of doves!

  5. I really like Abby’s suggestion of names associated with doves. I looked up a list of Goddess who have associations with doves. Ishtar came up. I then looked up associated names of Ishtar on Behind the Name and found Esther and Hester.

    https://www.behindthename.com/name/ishtar/related

    Minerva, Odette, and Esther

    Doves are also associated with Mary. So you could always choose one of the many Marian names. Additionally Meadowlarks are quite common in Native American lore, there might be some inspiration there.

    Larks are associated with the moon, and there are lots of moon names.

    Hope you you find a name you love!

  6. Paloma is a wonderful suggestion! Also loving many of the other commenters’ great ideas (Florence “Wren” = genius!)

    Colombe
    Philomel
    Larkspur
    Kittiwake
    Circe
    Salome
    Olivine
    Roselin
    Fionnuala/Fenella
    Ptarmigan
    Linnet
    Halcyone
    Cygne
    Avis

  7. I’m so excited that my question was picked and am loving reading all these wonderful suggestions. Thank you Abby and everyone who has commented!

  8. Love the suggestion of Paloma as well as another name meaning dove – Jemima.

    Another uncommon name associated with falcons is Peregrine. App Mnt featured this name, so check out the entire write up. It may be used more for boys, but seems like it could work for both.

    No direct bird connection, but i like Alma for this sib set. Alma with its “soul” meaning seems to fit with the wisdom/grace concepts in the other names.

  9. Ditto the suggestions of Lenore, Freya, Vega, and Rhiannon.

    I’d add Nyx — she’s the Greek personification of Night, sometimes depicted as a black bird — some say she created the world by laying an egg, and is a part of Aristophanes’ play The Birds [wherein she’s the grandmother of said birds through her son Eros]. I like this paragraph:

    “At the beginning there was only Chaos, Night (Nyx), Darkness (Erebus), and the Abyss (Tartarus). Earth, the Air and Heaven had no existence. Firstly, blackwinged Night laid a germless egg in the bosom of the infinite deeps of Darkness, and from this, after the revolution of long ages, sprang the graceful Love (Eros) with his glittering golden wings, swift as the whirlwinds of the tempest. He mated in the deep Abyss with dark Chaos, winged like himself, and thus hatched forth our race, which was the first to see the light.”

    And, of course, going to literal translations of different birds in non-English languages leads to loads of options.

  10. I don’t have any suggestions but I think Lenore fits perfectly with what you’re going for and really works with Minerva and Odette. Good luck!