Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Baby names

Find baby name inspiration and advice on the Mumsnet Baby Names forum.

Unisex names? Suggestions

60 replies

SimplySara · 16/02/2014 11:43

Any suggestions on nice names that would work for either a boy or a girl?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Leeds2 · 16/02/2014 11:52

Robin. Eden. Morgan.

That's all I can think of!

AbiRoad · 16/02/2014 11:55

Rowan
Harper and othe surname type names of this type (Parker etc), although these names are not for me
Alex
Frankie.
Charley

Littleturkish · 16/02/2014 11:59

Max (Maxine, Maximilian, Maxwell)

Charley (Charlotte, Charlie, Charles)

Pat (Patricia, Patrick)

Madison

Billy/Billie

Can't think of any more...

Kantha · 16/02/2014 12:01

Max
Sam
Jo(e)
Leslie/Lesley
Pat
Lee
Jan (different pronunciation)
Sasha/Sacha

Bowlersarm · 16/02/2014 12:01

Freddy (Alfred/Frederick/Frederica)

Frances/Francis

Sam (Samantha/Samuel)

Jo(e) (Joanna/Josephine/Joseph)

mumbaisapphirebluespruce · 16/02/2014 13:07

Phoenix
Avery

SunnyL · 16/02/2014 13:13

Don't do it. I've got a unisex name and it irritating when growing up kids tease you for having a boys name. As an adult it is irritating because people phone and email me thinking I might be a man.

P.s. my name is listed above.

onedev · 16/02/2014 13:17

Jamie

HoneyandRum · 16/02/2014 13:24

Taylor

Kendall

McKenzie

Tam

HoneyandRum · 16/02/2014 13:25

Nicky

Seminyak · 16/02/2014 13:31

Joey
Emerson
Alex
Sydney

ToffeeJungle · 16/02/2014 13:33

Toni / Tony
Teri / Terry
Ashley
Lee / Leigh
Drew
Cameron
Jess / Jesse

I also know a female Glenn and a male Lindsay.

RiaOverTheRainbow · 16/02/2014 13:33

Unisex names:
Ashley
Cameron
Mackenzie, Mackenna, probably other Mac.s
Jude
Storm
Jay
Hilary
Vivian
Kim
Evelyn
Misha
Bailey
Jordan
Kendal
Kellly
Kim
Meredith
Raven
Shannon
Taylor
Linden
Kestrel

Unisex nicknames:
Jessie/Jesse
Georgie
Alex/Lex/Sandy
Phil/Pip
Tom(my)
Jamie
Chris/Kit
Jem
Jas (Jasper/Jasmine)
Mel
Tony
Olly
Bobby
Andy
Jackie
Nicky
Terry
Vic
Val
Will

BrunoBrookesDinedAlone · 16/02/2014 13:34

Jordan

HoneyandRum · 16/02/2014 13:35

I met a woman called Michael.

kasbah72 · 16/02/2014 14:04

Robin
Cameron
Alex
Jude
Taylor

SimplySara · 16/02/2014 15:11

Thanks for all the suggestions. I do like Avery, Rowan, Francis (Frankie), Jo (Joseph/Josephine) and Alex.

I went a-searching in the baby name sites and came up with some others but please keep suggesting...

Ainsley
Blaire
Rae/Ray
Scout
Alden
Wren
Sonny/Sunny

Also possible shortened versions of
Leonora (Leo)
Willa (Will)
Cassandra/Cassian (or Cassius) = Cass

Also, what are your thoughts on choosing a unisex name?

OP posts:
Newname14 · 16/02/2014 15:14

Agree I've got a unisex life and people are always mistaking me for a he and I got teased too don't do it!!!

Martorana · 16/02/2014 15:16

Hmm. In my experience "unisex" names are always boys names given to girls. Which is annoying. I think you should only call a girl Michael or Billy if you would call a boy Emily or Winnie.

LineRunner · 16/02/2014 15:16

Pete
Dana
Gareth

shockednc · 16/02/2014 15:25

Ultimately it's your decision, and many of these names are lovely. But as you've asked, I have a unisex name, mentioned a few times in this thread. I've always disliked it, it's frustrating when people assume you're a man before they meet you, it always bothered me as a child when at the start of every year the teacher will have made name tags - all the girls' names pink, the boys' names blue, my nametag would be green. Same with pencil boxes, etc. Color thing may no longer be as relevant, but it was a Big Deal when I was child. Now I always have to put my middle name on forms.

SilkStalkings · 19/02/2014 09:43

LOVE Leonora!

SimplySara · 19/02/2014 12:02

Many thanks for the suggestions and comments. I do think that the many of the "don't do it" ones actually justify why one would want to name their child with a unisex name. It allows for the person not to be gendered pigeon-holed based solely on their name before people even meet them. I may be a bit of an optimist but I hope we are moving beyond the pink/blue divide much more than we were 20-40 years ago (i.e. when we were growing up). Yet it is still there as evident by our instance on giving our girls "cute girlie" names and our boys "strong traditional" names. I am hoping to move past this.

OP posts:
Martorana · 19/02/2014 12:56

Always dubious about this from a feminist point of view- "unisex" in this context usually means "boy's"

I have never heard of a boy being given a traditional girl's name and it being called unisex.

Theonlyoneiknow · 19/02/2014 12:59

Jude ?

Swipe left for the next trending thread