They’re here! Welcome Maisie Marin and Georgia James! Kara writes that Georgia was almost Hattie, but they decided three names ending in the y/ie sound was a little too matched for them … but now they call Georgia Georgie most of the time!
Kara writes:
We have a daughter named Cecily Kate, and she has twin sisters coming this fall.
I feel like we’ve read every baby name list on the internet, but nothing seems to stick!
We like less common names that still feel timeless, and it’s a bonus if they have a strong meaning behind them (we tend to lean towards water, nature, or light).
At the top of our list right now are Laurel, Marin, Lux, Iris, Hannah, Georgia, and Evangeline, but we also like Portia, Harriet, Emilia, and Maisie.
I’d love for one of the girls to have my dad’s middle name, James, but if it doesn’t pan out, that’s okay, too.
I think if the twins were b/g instead of g/g, it’d be easier. Everything on our list just feels like a singleton name.
Our last name starts with P, and has a double L in it, so we’re trying to avoid singsong names like Ella/Stella.
Thanks in advance for any help you can give!
Please read on for my response, and leave your helpful suggestions in the comments.
Dear Kara –
I have three pieces of advice, all of which sound like they conflict, but I promise they work together. All of these might apply to naming siblings in general, but twin names tend to be said together more frequently. Plus, issues of fairness and individuality may come up more often.
The lovely C in DC – a twin mom herself – said it best. Twin names need to have equal “weight.” Both have a family name (or deeply meaningful name), or neither does. Both have a similar number of syllables, or both have a formal name with nickname, or … you get the idea. There’s no right way to do it, but it’s important to find balance.
So that’s the first principle. The second piece of advice comes from Swistle, also a twin mom: name your twins as if you’re naming your next two children. In other words, don’t get too hung up on finding names with a clever hook, or even two names that share the same initial. If it happens naturally, great! But no pressure.
And yet, I think that advice depends on whether you’re a cohesive namer in the first place. I’ve worked with twin parents who had two older children; they chose to stick with a very similar style for their twins. It helped narrow the decision process. But I’ve also talked with plenty of twin parents with older children who didn’t have an obvious style established, so it can present a challenge.
Now, to the names.
Your list is packed with great possibilities, and yet, some of them don’t pair as well with Cecily. Cecily strikes me as somewhere between traditional and romantic. It’s very different in style than Lux. Or Marin.
Lux and Marin might make great middles, though, especially if the other sister has the family names James.
That leaves Laurel, Iris, Hannah, Georgia, Evangeline, Portia, Harriet, Emilia, and Maisie. They’re all promising, but I’m not sure I could choose two from that list.
I’d group them like this:
- Because your surname has a strong ‘l’ sound, I suspect Laurel might prove challenging. (Too bad, because it’s a great name. But when I say them together, all I hear is Laura P …)
- Iris, Georgia, Evangeline, Emilia, and Maisie all seem like mainstream choices, though they’re all relatively underused.
- Portia and Harriet both seem much rarer than most on your list; Hannah, on the other hand, feels slightly more common.
Let’s look for more names like the middle set.
Adelaide – Like Evangeline, it’s long and lovely. It also hits the familiar, but not too common, mark.
Emmeline – This strikes me as a promising Emilia-Evangeline.
Eliza – If you like Emilia, I wonder if you’d consider Eliza? It has the same traditional, but romantic feel as Cecily.
Genevieve – Evangeline reminds me of Genevieve, but I think they’re slightly too close to use as twin names. Or maybe not?
Hattie – Hattie started out as a nickname for Harriet, but it often stands on its own today. (In fact, Hattie ranks in the US Top 1000, while Harriet remains off the list.)
Helena – Harriet, Hannah, and Emilia together make me think of Helena. It’s a pitch perfect sister name for Cecily, and I like Helena James quite a bit. One drawback: people pronounce Helena at least three different ways.
Vera – Vera shares some of Evangeline’s sounds, but is a little bit on the shorter side, like Iris.
Okay, time to mix and match.
Eliza and Evangeline – Both sound like sisters for Cecily; they’re linked by the shared first letter, but still sound distinct.
Emilia and Helena – Emilia and Helena feel traditional but slightly unexpected, just like Cecily.
Iris and Vera – Two shorter names, Iris and Vera feel every bit as vintage as Cecily.
Iris and Georgia – They’re almost two noun names, and yet both have such long histories of use that it doesn’t seem obvious at first. Visually, Georgia looks much longer than Iris – but sound-wise, they’re both just two syllables.
Hattie and Maisie – Two nickname names, Hattie and Maisie are often bestowed as independent names. That makes them very similar, but still distinct in sound.
I like pretty much all of these combinations. My favorites are Eliza James and Evangeline Lux, with Hattie James and Maisie Lux coming in at a close second.
But this is one of these moments when it’s great to have a community of name enthusiasts available, because I know I haven’t exhausted all of the options.
Readers, what would you name twin sisters for Cecily Kate?




Cecily was in my top 5 names for my daughter, and here are the rest, in case our styles match:
Louisa
Paloma
Helen
Margaret nn Maisy (the winner)
I love Iris and Vera, and I would steal it for my own twins…if I didn’t have an adverse reaction to the name Vera due to a family “friend with the name who was a whack job! Oh, and if I was having twins at all.
Secondly, Iris and Georgia. Love it!
Eloise and Eliza sound so sweet with Cecily Kate!
Eliza James and Eloise Lux?
if you’d rather have different first initials, maybe Eloise or Eliza and Beatrix or Imogen ?
Cecily, Eloise and Beatrix
Cecily, Eliza and Imogen
I LOVE Cecily Kate!!!
Possible combinations I like for you:
Cecily, Emmeline, and Annabelle
Cecily, Beatrice, and Louisa
Other names that sound like sisters to Cecily to me:
Melinda
Helen
Felicia
Georgina
Eliza
Juliet
Philippa
Paulina/Pauline
Rosalind/Rosamund/Rosina
Henrietta
Genevieve
Marian
Dorothea
Elspeth
Eloise
Clarissa
Millicent and Lucinda also occurred to me as possibilities.
I love Abby’s suggestion of Eliza, too!
I love the suggestions of Emmeline, Adelaide and Aveline.
What about Rosalie, Gemma, Aurelia or Anastasia?
It would be great to have two formal names with similar nicknames:
Emilia & Margaret :: Millie & Maisie
Vivienne & Evangaline :: Viv & Evie
Emmaline Lux and Eugenia James
I love Florence and Vivienne. Both sound timeless and romantic. The fact that the syllables don’t match doesn’t matter to me. The two names together flow so well and are similar in length. And I think finding another one-syllable family name as a middle name shouldn’t be too hard. Vivienne James and Florence (______). Good luck!
So many good suggestions!
Love Cecily, Harriet & Louise
Also Cecily and:
Harriet & Flora
Willow & Evangeline
Marin & Bridget