| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engelah | Angel; messenger of God | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Ennea | Nine / ninth | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eos | Dawn; goddess of the dawn | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eostafi | Steadfast, well‑built | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Eostafia | Steadfast, well‑built (also associated with fruitfulness/productivity) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eostafie | Steadfast, well‑built | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eostafy | From Greek Eustathios, meaning 'well-built, steadfast, stable' or 'well-arranged' | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epaphras | From Greek, meaning 'lovely' or 'charming' (often rendered as 'amiable' or 'devoted' in biblical contexts). | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epaphroditas | Favored/beloved of Aphrodite | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epaphroditos | Lovely, charming; favored by Aphrodite | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epeius | Mythological Greek craftsman credited with building the Trojan Horse; associated with skill and ingenuity. | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Ephie | Well-spoken; of good repute | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Ephremios | Fruitful; 'doubly fruitful' (derived from Hebrew Ephraim) | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Ephyra | From Ephyra - an ancient Greek place name; exact original meaning is uncertain | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epi | Diminutive of names derived from Greek 'epiphaneia' meaning 'manifestation, appearance, revelation' | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epifanee | Manifestation or appearance (notably the revelation of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epifaney | Manifestation, revelation (originally the manifestation of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epifani | Manifestation or appearance (often of a divine revelation; related to 'Epiphany') | Greek, Italian | Boy | — | |
| Epifania | Manifestation or appearance (especially of a deity); associated with the Epiphany feast | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epifanie | “manifestation” - especially the manifestation of God (as in the Christian Feast of the Epiphany) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epifaniia | Manifestation or appearance (often of the divine) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epione | Soothing; goddess who eased pain and aided healing | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epiphama | Manifestation, appearance, revelation (especially a divine revelation) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epiphanee | Manifestation; appearance; revelation (especially of a divine being) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epiphani | Manifestation, appearance (especially of a deity) | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epiphania | “manifestation” or “appearance”; in Christian use, the revelation or manifestation of God (Epiphany) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epiphanie | Manifestation or revelation; associated with the Christian Feast of the Epiphany (the revelation of Christ to the Magi). | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eppie | Well-spoken | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyfanee | Manifestation or revelation (notably the Christian feast commemorating the revelation of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyfaney | Manifestation, appearance; revelation (often of a divine nature) | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Epyfani | Manifestation or appearance; revelation (especially of a deity or of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyfania | “manifestation” or “appearance” (notably the revelation/appearance of Christ) | English, Greek, Italian | Girl | — | |
| Epyfanie | Manifestation; appearance; revelation (originally the manifestation of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyfany | Manifestation or revelation; 'appearance' (often of a divine nature) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyphani | Manifestation or appearance; revelation (especially of a divine being) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyphania | Manifestation, appearance (often a divine revelation, e.g., the appearance of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyphanie | Manifestation; revelation or appearance (traditionally the revelation of Christ) | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Epyphany | Manifestation or appearance, especially a divine revelation | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Eramus | Beloved, desired | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erana | Depends on origin: 'watchful, awakened' (from Hebrew Eran) or 'peace' (if derived from Greek Irene). In Māori use it is a transliteration and typically carries the meaning of the original name. | Greek, Hebrew | Girl | — | |
| Erasma | Beloved, desired | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Erasmah | Beloved, desired | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Erasme | Beloved, desirable | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erasmi | Beloved, amiable | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erast | Beloved; desired | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erasteus | Beloved, desired | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erastus | Beloved, desired | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erato | Name of the Muse of lyric and love poetry; derived from Greek roots meaning 'lovely' or 'beloved.' | Greek | Girl | — | |
| Erebus | Darkness; the personification of deep darkness or shadow in Greek mythology | Greek | Boy | — | |
| Erechtheus | Name of a legendary king of Athens; exact etymological meaning is uncertain. | Greek | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Greek-origin name in our dataset.