| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sericah | Likely 'silk' or 'silken' (from seric-) or a modern name suggesting serenity | English | Girl | — | |
| Serickah | A modern invented feminine name; by association can mean 'silk' (Serica) or 'mynah bird' (Sarika) | English | Girl | — | |
| Serikah | No established traditional meaning; commonly interpreted as a modern elaboration suggesting 'serene' or drawing on roots meaning 'silk' or 'star'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Serinda | Calm, serene | English, Latin | Girl | — | |
| Serious | Solemn, earnest, thoughtful or grave in demeanor | English | Unisex | — | |
| Serle | Uncertain - likely derived from a medieval personal name or a place-name rather than a modern lexical meaning | English | Unisex | — | |
| Serlyna | A modern coinage meaning 'serene' or 'calm' (essentially 'little serene one') | English | Girl | — | |
| Serlyne | A modern invented name suggesting 'serene' or 'calm' with a lyrical ending | English, French | Girl | — | |
| Seryckah | Little serene one - calm, gentle | English | Girl | — | |
| Serynah | Serene, calm, tranquil | English | Girl | — | |
| Seryne | Calm, tranquil; peaceful | English, French | Girl | — | |
| Serynn | Calm, peaceful; sometimes associated with 'star' via Welsh Seren | English | Girl | — | |
| Serytta | Likely 'little princess' (from Sara) or 'serene/peaceful one' - a modern/creative name with meanings tied to Sarah or Serena | English | Girl | — | |
| Setun | Unclear - may mean 'of/related to the Egyptian god Set' or derive from Old English elements meaning 'settlement/town' (set + tun). | English | Boy | — | |
| Sevanah | From the treeless plain; open grassland | English | Girl | — | |
| Severn | From the River Severn - a place-name derived from an ancient river name (Sabrina/Hafren), possibly meaning a boundary or related to an old river-name element | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sewal | Probably 'sea-ruler' or 'sea-power' (derived from Old English elements relating to the sea and rule) | English | Boy | — | |
| Sewall | Likely 'sea-ruler' (Old English sǣ + weald) or related 'victory-ruler' (Old Norse roots) | English | Boy | — | |
| Seward | Sea guardian / guardian of the sea | English | Boy | — | |
| Sewel | Surname-derived; likely 'sea spring' or 'dweller by the sea spring' (meaning uncertain) | English | Unisex | — | |
| Sewell | From an English surname meaning 'sea spring' or derived from elements meaning 'victory-ruler'. | English | Boy | — | |
| Sey | Varies by origin - commonly a short form of the surname-derived Seymour or a West African family name; no single established given-name meaning. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seybrook | From/denoting a brook by the sea; dweller by a seaside stream. | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seybrooke | Sea brook; dweller by the brook or a brook near the sea | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seylea | Uncertain; possibly 'heaven' (if from Celia) or 'rock/pause' (if from Sela) - meaning not firmly established | English | Girl | — | |
| Seyleah | Generally treated as a modern variant of Leah (Hebrew: "weary") or influenced by Sheila/Shayla; sometimes given the sense of "delicate" or "beloved" in contemporary usage | English | Girl | — | |
| Seyleigh | Modern invented name likely meaning roughly 'sea meadow' or 'dweller by the meadow' (from 'Sey/sea' + '-leigh' = meadow/clearing). | English | Girl | — | |
| Seyley | Probably 'blessed' or 'happy' via Seely/Sealy; alternatively interpreted as a modern combination using 'ley' ('clearing/meadow'). No single established historical meaning. | English | Girl | — | |
| Seylie | Possibly 'blessed' or 'happy' if linked to Scots 'seelie'; otherwise treated as a modern invented/phonetic name without a single established meaning. | English | Girl | — | |
| Seymoor | From Saint-Maur (a place name); originally a locational surname | English | Boy | — | |
| Seymor | Toponymic: 'from Saint-Maur' (a Norman place name); alternatively interpreted as 'sea marsh'. | English | Boy | — | |
| Seymore | From Saint-Maur (a place name); sometimes interpreted as 'sea moor' or 'marsh by the sea.' | English | Boy | — | |
| Seymoure | From Saint-Maur (a place named for Saint Maur) | English | Boy | — | |
| Seyn | Likely 'God is gracious' (if derived from Seán/John) | English | Boy | — | |
| Seywall | Possibly 'sea-ruler' or 'ruler by the sea' (surname-derived; meaning uncertain) | English | Boy | — | |
| Seyward | Sea-guardian or victory-guardian | English | Boy | — | |
| Seywel | Probably 'sea well' or 'spring by the sea' (exact origin uncertain) | English | Unisex | — | |
| Seywell | 'sea well' or 'dweller by a spring/well by the sea' | English | Unisex | — | |
| Shabyne | No established traditional meaning; often treated as a modern feminine name associated with Sabina ('Sabine woman') or simply as a unique/invented name. | English | Girl | — | |
| Shacora | Likely derived from Cora meaning 'maiden' - interpreted as 'maiden' or 'beloved maiden' in modern usage | English | Girl | — | |
| Shaddock | A surname of uncertain/obscure meaning (likely locational or descriptive). Later linked to the pummelo ('shaddock') named for a member of the Shaddock family. | English | Boy | — | |
| Shadelle | Modern coinage; literal meaning uncertain. Often interpreted as a feminine or affectionate form of names beginning with 'Sha-' (e.g., Sharon, Shaina) or as 'little Sha' because of the -elle ending. | English | Girl | — | |
| Shadene | Modern blend - possibly 'from the valley' (if from Dene) or 'gentle/young fawn' (if linked to Arabic Shaden) | English | Girl | — | |
| Shadey | From Arabic شادي (Shadi) meaning 'singer' or 'one who chants'; may also be associated with the English adjective 'shady'. | Arabic, English | Boy | — | |
| Shado | Derived from the English word 'shadow' - 'shade' or 'shadow' | English | Unisex | — | |
| Shadreeka | No established historical meaning; a modern coinage. Often understood by families as a melodic feminine name and sometimes interpreted informally as 'bringer of joy' or 'gift.' | English | Girl | — | |
| Shadrica | Feminine form of Shadrach - a Biblical name of ancient (Akkadian/Babylonian) origin; the exact meaning is uncertain and likely theophoric or obscure. | English | Girl | — | |
| Shadrique | A modern blended name suggesting 'powerful' or 'noble ruler' (from Shad/Shadrach + -rique) | English | Boy | — | |
| Shadryca | A modern invented name, likely a blend of 'Shad-' (shade/protection or the 'Shad-' element in names) and '-ryca' (echoing 'Erica'/'-ric' meaning ruler) - loosely 'protected ruler' or 'one who guards'. | English | Girl | — | |
| Shadrycah | Derived from Shadrach; original Shadrach has uncertain meaning (often linked to Babylonian theonyms or rendered loosely as 'servant of Aku'). Used today as a modern feminine name. | English | Girl | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Canada for every English-origin name in our dataset.