| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sedgewic | Settlement or farm where sedge (a marsh grass) grows | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgewick | Settlement or farm by the sedge (marsh grass) | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgewik | Dweller at the sedge settlement / sedge farm | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgleah | Clearing or meadow where sedge grows | English | Girl | — | |
| Sedglee | Modern coinage meaning roughly 'meadow or clearing by the sedge' (sedge = marsh plant; Lee = clearing/meadow). | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sedgleigh | Meadow or clearing where sedge grows | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sedgley | From the clearing or meadow where sedge grows; dweller by the sedge meadow | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgli | No established historical meaning; considered a modern coinage. Sometimes associated with or interpreted as a variant of 'Sedgley' (an English place-name) rather than having its own traditional meaning. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sedglie | Dweller at the sedge meadow | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sedgly | From the sedge meadow or clearing; dweller by a sedge-grown clearing | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sedgwic | Dweller at or settlement by the sedge (marsh grass) | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgwick | Dweller at or owner of a farm/settlement where sedge grows ('sedge farm') | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgwik | From Old English 'secg' (sedge) + 'wīc' (dwelling/settlement) - 'sedge settlement' or 'settlement by the sedge' | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgwyc | Sedge-covered settlement; farm or dwelling where sedge grows | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgwyck | From the settlement/farm where sedge (marsh grass) grows | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedgwyk | From Old English elements meaning 'sedge' (rushy grass) + 'settlement' - a dweller at the sedge farm/settlement | English | Boy | — | |
| Sedley | From the clearing where sedge (marsh grass) grows | English | Boy | — | |
| sedric | Likely 'beloved' or 'friend' (from Brittonic roots); sometimes rendered as 'bounty' in name sources | English | Boy | — | |
| Seebirt | Possibly 'sea-born' or 'sea-bright'; alternatively related to Germanic 'Siegbert' meaning 'victorious-bright'. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seebrook | From a place name meaning 'brook by the sea' or a dweller by a brook/stream | English | Boy | — | |
| Seebrooke | ‘Sea brook’ - a stream or brook by the sea; originally a topographic surname. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seebyrt | Sea-bright (bright as the sea) | English | Boy | — | |
| Seelea | Likely a modern blend meaning "sea meadow" (or interpreted as "soulful" via German 'Seele') | English | Girl | — | |
| Seeleah | A modern invented name; commonly interpreted as 'heavenly' (from Celia/Cecilia) or associated with 'weary' (from Leah) | English | Girl | — | |
| Seeman | Sea-man; sailor | English, German, Old English | Boy | — | |
| Seemoor | Originally a Norman place-name meaning 'from Saint-Maur'; later used as an English surname and given name. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seemoore | Originally a surname meaning 'from Saint-Maur'; folk etymology often renders it as 'sea marsh' or 'marsh by the sea.' | English | Boy | — | |
| Seemor | From Saint Maur; ultimately from Latin Maurus meaning 'Moor' or 'dark-skinned' | English | Boy | — | |
| Seemore | Originally 'of St. Maur' (a toponym); sometimes used as a phonetic/modern coinage meaning 'see more'. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seemour | From the place-name Saint-Maur (from Latin Maurus, 'Moor' or 'dark-skinned'); originally a surname | English | Boy | — | |
| Seemoure | Originally a Norman locational surname meaning 'from Saint-Maur' (after Saint Maurus); associated with the name Maurus ('dark, Moor') or a place named for the saint. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seewall | Surname-based name likely referring to a shoreline/sea barrier or derived from the surname Sewall/Sewell; exact origin is uncertain. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seeward | Guardian of victory; alternatively 'guardian of the sea'. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seewell | Dweller by a spring or well by the sea | English | Boy | — | |
| Seff | Likely a pet form of Joseph - "He will add" / "God will increase" | English | Boy | — | |
| Seffi | Often a diminutive of Hebrew Yosef meaning "God will add"; can also be a pet form of Sophie (from Greek for "wisdom"). | English, Hebrew | Unisex | — | |
| Seftyn | Likely a modern variant of Seth or Sefton - roughly 'appointed' (from Seth) or 'from Sefton' (place-name). | English | Boy | — | |
| Segar | Likely 'victory-spear' (Germanic) - alternatively a variant of 'Sagar' meaning 'ocean'. | English, Germanic | Boy | — | |
| Seileah | A modern variant whose roots suggest meanings like 'pause/praise' (from Selah) or 'heavenly' (from Celia); generally interpreted as 'heavenly, peaceful, or a poetic pause' | English | Girl | — | |
| Seilee | A modern invented name with a nautical or gentle/pleasant connotation; can be read as 'from the sea' or echoing 'seelie' (blessed/pleasant). | English | Girl | — | |
| Seileigh | A modern, stylistic spelling often interpreted as combining a sea/sail element with "leigh" (meadow); overall meaning uncertain - commonly rendered as "sea meadow" or simply a melodic feminine name | English | Girl | — | |
| Seiley | Uncertain; possibly derived from Old English 'sælig' meaning 'blessed' or a modern invented name | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seily | Possibly 'blind' (if derived from Cecilia/Síle) or 'happy/blessed' (if from Old English seely); overall usage and meaning depend on the root origin. | English, Irish | Girl | — | |
| Seimoor | Originally a locational surname meaning 'from Saint-Maur'; folk interpretation often reads it as 'sea moor' or 'marsh by the sea'. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seimoore | Originally a locational surname meaning 'from St. Maur'; folk interpretation 'sea moor' or 'sea marsh.' | English | Boy | — | |
| Seimor | Originally a surname meaning 'from Saint-Maur' (associated with the abbey of Saint Maur); sometimes interpreted as 'sea marsh' or linked to 'Moor.' | English | Boy | — | |
| Seimore | Derived from the Norman place name Saint-Maur - literally “of Saint Maur,” referring to the medieval saint/place named for him. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seimour | From Saint-Maur (a place name); sometimes interpreted as 'sea mouth' or 'marsh' | English, Norman French | Boy | — | |
| Seiwall | Possibly 'sea wall' (a wall protecting the shore) or linked to Old English elements meaning 'victory‑ruler'; origin and precise meaning are uncertain | English | Boy | — | |
| Seiward | Likely 'sea-guardian' (Old English sǣweard) or, in related Germanic forms, 'victory-guardian' | English, Germanic | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Canada for every English-origin name in our dataset.