| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amorela | Little love; beloved | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Amorita | 'little love' / 'beloved little one' | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Amílcar | Brother of Melqart | Latin, Phoenician, Portuguese, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Ana Cristina | Favored/graceful follower of Christ | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Analejandra | Graced or graceful defender of mankind | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Analey | A modern blend meaning roughly "graceful meadow" or "favored meadow" (combining 'grace' + 'meadow'). | English, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| analia | Often interpreted as 'graceful' or 'favored' - a combination of Ana ('grace') and Lía/Leah | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Anana | Cloud (Hebrew). Colloquially 'pineapple' in Rioplatense Spanish (ananá). | Hebrew, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ancelina | Likely "little angel" (from Angelina) or "divine protection/God's helmet" (from Anselm) | French, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ancelino | Diminutive of Ansel/Anselm - 'protected by God' or 'divine protection' (literally 'little Ansel') | Italian, Portuguese, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Anchoreta | Hermit; recluse - one who withdraws from the world | Greek, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ancizar | Uncertain; etymology not well attested - possibly Basque in origin | Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Andeana | From the Andes; Andean woman | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Andes | From the Andes; relating to the Andes mountains | Spanish | Unisex | — | |
| Andrecito | Diminutive of Andrés: "little Andrew" (Andrew/Andreas means "manly, brave" or "man") | Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Andriela | Feminine form of Andrew - "manly, brave, strong" | Greek, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Aneja | No single established given-name meaning. As an Indian surname it denotes family/clan origin; in Spanish 'añeja' means 'aged' or 'mature'. When used as a given name it is often treated as a modern/phonetic variant of names such as Anaya or Anja. | Indian, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Angel Liu | Angel: messenger or heavenly being; Liu: a common Chinese family name (no single English meaning; historically associated with the character 劉) | English, Spanish | Unisex | — | |
| Angeliza | Angelic, 'messenger (of God)'; often interpreted as a blend of Angela ('angel') and Eliza ('pledged to God') | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Angenita | Likely "little angel" (diminutive of Ángela/Angelita) | Greek, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Anitte | Grace; favor | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Antolin | Derived from the Roman family name Antonius/Antoninus; traditionally rendered as 'priceless' or 'inestimable.' | Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Antoñito | Diminutive of Antonio - "little Antonio" (Antonio is often interpreted as "priceless/invaluable") | Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Aquillino | Eagle-like (from Latin aquila 'eagle') | Latin, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Aramenta | Uncertain - likely a variant of Araminta; sometimes interpreted as 'defender' or of debated/unknown origin. | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| arceli | Altar of heaven | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arcilla | Clay (earth/soil) | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ardelisa | Unclear; likely a compound name. May incorporate elements related to 'Adel-' (noble) or 'Lisa' (short for Elizabeth, 'God is my oath') | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ardila | Likely a surname or place-name origin; in Spanish it resembles 'ardilla' (squirrel). Exact meaning is uncertain. | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arela | Likely a feminine form of Ariel/Ariella - 'lion of God' (biblical Ariel can also be rendered 'altar of God') | Hebrew, Latin, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| arely | Likely "lion of God" (related to Hebrew Ariel); used as a modern Spanish/Latin-American feminine name | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arenita | Little sand; small sandy place or beach | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arentino | Italianate diminutive; possibly 'little Arent' or related to Latin 'argent' (silver) / denoting Argentine origin - rare/modern usage | Italian, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Argante | Silver; shining or bright | French, Italian, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Argel | From Argel (Algiers) - 'the islands' (derived from Arabic al-Jazā'ir) | Portuguese, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Argentinah | From Argentina; associated with 'silver' (argentum) | Latin, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Argie | Diminutive form of names beginning with "Arg-", often associated with Greek arg- meaning "shining/bright" or with Argus meaning "watchful/guardian" | English, Greek, Spanish | Unisex | — | |
| Argiles | Clay; from a place with clay or an occupational name for a potter | Catalan, French, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Aricely | Derived from Latin 'Ara Caeli' meaning 'altar of the sky' or 'altar of heaven' (often interpreted as 'heavenly altar'). | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ariet | Possibly 'ram' (if from Latin/Spanish) or 'little lion'/'lioness' (if diminutive of Hebrew Ari/Ariel) or 'little aria' (if diminutive of Aria); overall meaning is uncertain | French, Italian, Spanish | Unisex | — | |
| Arieta | Little aria; small song or melody | Italian, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Ariseli | Derived from Araceli/Ariceli - 'altar of the heavens' / 'heavenly altar' | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Armandos | Army man; soldier, warrior | Germanic, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Armenta | Of the herd; associated with cattle or herding | Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arminda | Feminine form of Armand/Armando, from Germanic elements meaning 'army' + 'protection' - roughly 'protector of the army' or 'soldier'. | Italian, Portuguese, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Armino | Derived from a Germanic root meaning 'whole' or 'universal.' | Germanic, Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Aroldis | Likely derived from Germanic elements meaning 'ruler' or 'eagle-ruler' (related to Arnold/Harold) | Spanish | Boy | — | |
| Arona | Often treated as a feminine form of Aaron - ‘mountain of strength’ or ‘exalted’; also appears as a place-name. | Hebrew, Italian, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arrosa | Rose; rosy, like a rose | Latin, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Arte | Often a diminutive of Art/Arthur ('bear' or 'noble'); can also be associated with the Italian/Spanish word 'arte' ('art') or the Greek name Artemios ('safe, healthy'). | English, Greek, Italian, Spanish | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across Spain, United States for every Spanish-origin name in our dataset.