French flower names sit at the intersection of botanical beauty and linguistic elegance, and they make some of the most quietly stunning choices for a baby girl. The French language has a long tradition of drawing on the natural world for given names, and flowers in particular have been a source of feminine naming inspiration for centuries.
The entries here are all genuine given names with real floral roots or meanings, organized by the flower they evoke. A few are classics you’ll recognize immediately; others are criminally underused outside of France. All of them carry something the English-speaking world could use more of.
Rose and Its Relatives
The rose is the queen of French flower names, and it has generated more naming variations than any other bloom. These names range from the familiar to the unexpectedly fresh.
Rose
The most direct of all French flower names, Rose comes from the Latin rosa and has been used in France since the medieval period. It works as a given name and as a middle name with equal grace, and it has never really gone out of style because it never really overexposed itself.
Rosalie
A French elaboration of Rose, Rosalie has a soft, vintage warmth that feels genuinely current without being trendy. It was popular in 19th-century France and is now climbing again in English-speaking countries, likely because parents are rediscovering its combination of sweetness and substance.
Rosette
Rosette is the diminutive form of Rose in French, meaning “little rose.” It has a delicate, old-fashioned charm that sets it apart from the more familiar Rose variants, and it remains genuinely uncommon in the English-speaking world.
Rosine
Another French diminutive of Rose, Rosine is softer and more obscure than Rosalie or Rosette. It has a quiet elegance that makes it feel both antique and wearable, and it is virtually unused outside France.
Rosaline
Rosaline is a French and medieval European form combining the rose root with the Germanic lind (soft, gentle). Shakespeare used it in Romeo and Julietwhich gives it literary weight alongside its floral one. It reads as more romantic and slightly more dramatic than plain Rose.
Violet and Lavender Tones
Purple-flowering plants have a particular hold on French naming culture. These names carry that soft, cool-toned beauty.
Violette
Violette is the French form of Violet, derived from the Latin viola (the violet flower). It is a top girls’ name in France right now and has been gaining traction internationally. The double-t ending gives it a distinctly French finish that the English Violet simply doesn’t have.
Viola
Technically Latin in origin, Viola has been used in French-speaking contexts for centuries and refers directly to the violet flower. It is also a musical instrument name, which layers in additional elegance. Shakespeare gave it to his most resourceful heroine in Twelfth Night.
Lavande
Lavande is the French word for lavender and has genuine use as a given name in France, evoking the purple fields of Provence. It is rare, which is part of the appeal, and it sounds quietly beautiful in both French and English pronunciation.
Lily and White Flowers
Purity-associated white flowers have a deep history in French naming, tied to everything from religious iconography to the royal fleur-de-lis.
Lys
Lys is the French word for lily and is used as a given name in France and Belgium. It is short, striking, and unmistakably French. The fleur-de-lis, France’s most iconic symbol, literally means “flower of the lily,” which gives this name a regal undercurrent.
Lilie
A French spelling variant of Lily used as a given name in French-speaking regions, Lilie has the familiar sound of the flower name with a distinctly continental look on paper. It is gentle without being fragile.
Suzanne
Suzanne comes from the Hebrew Shoshannahmeaning lily, and arrived in France via the Greek and Latin biblical tradition. It has been a staple French name for centuries and carries the lily meaning even if the floral connection isn’t immediately obvious to modern ears. French singer Suzanne Valadon and the Leonard Cohen song have kept it culturally alive.
Blanche
Blanche means “white” in French and has strong associations with white flowers, particularly the white lily and jasmine. It was widely used in medieval France and among French royalty. It is underused today, which makes it feel ripe for rediscovery.
Daisy, Marguerite, and Sun Flowers
Bright, sun-associated flowers have given French naming some of its most cheerful and enduring options.
Marguerite
Marguerite is the French word for the daisy (specifically the ox-eye daisy, Leucanthemum vulgare) and has been a beloved French given name for centuries. It is also a form of Margaret, meaning “pearl,” so it carries a double meaning. Marguerite Yourcenar, the first woman elected to the Academie francaise, is one of its most distinguished bearers.
Margot
A French diminutive of Marguerite, Margot inherits the daisy meaning in a punchier, more fashionable package. It is having a major moment right now across Europe and North America, and for good reason: it is short, strong, and distinctly French.
Fleur
Fleur simply means “flower” in French and is used as a given name across French-speaking countries and in the UK. It is elegant in its directness. Fleur Delacour in the Harry Potter series introduced it to a generation of English-speaking readers.
Florentine
Florentine derives from the Latin florens (flowering, flourishing) and has been used as a French given name, particularly in the 19th century. It is elaborate and romantic in a way that feels genuinely distinctive today.
Flore
The French form of Flora, Flore comes from the Latin flos/floris meaning flower, and was the name of the Roman goddess of spring and flowers. It is used in France and French-speaking Switzerland as a given name and has a spare, classical beauty.
Jasmine and Exotic Blooms
Some of the most beautiful French flower names come from plants that traveled into French culture from further afield, carried by trade, colonialism, and the perfume industry.
Jasmine
Jasmine entered French as jasmin from Persian yasamin and has been used as a French given name since at least the 19th century, closely tied to the perfume industry in Grasse. The spelling Jasmine is the standard French feminine form and remains popular across French-speaking countries.
Yasmina
Yasmina is the Arabic and North African form of Jasmine, meaning jasmine flower, and is widely used in France’s francophone North African communities. It is a genuinely beautiful name that reflects France’s linguistic and cultural breadth.
Camelia
Camelia (also spelled Camellia) is used as a given name in France and Romania, referencing the camellia flower named after the botanist Georg Joseph Kamel. It has a lush, romantic sound and is associated with luxury through Coco Chanel’s famous use of the camellia as her signature motif.
Lily of the Valley and Spring Flowers
Lily of the valley holds a special place in French culture: it is the traditional flower of May Day (le muguet du premier mai), given as a gift for good luck. This has made it a meaningful naming inspiration.
Muguette
Muguette comes directly from the French word for lily of the valley (muguet) and has been used as a given name in France, particularly in the early-to-mid 20th century. It is charming, very French, and almost completely unknown outside France.
Pervenche
Pervenche is the French word for periwinkle (the small blue spring flower) and has genuine use as a French given name. The color pervenche, a soft blue-violet, is named after it. It is rare and poetic, and it sounds beautiful spoken aloud.
Iris and Blue Flowers
The iris has deep French roots: some historians connect it to the origins of the fleur-de-lis symbol, and it has inspired some lovely names.
Iris
Iris comes from Greek, meaning rainbow, and is also the name of the iris flower (named for its many colors). It has been used in France as a given name for well over a century and is currently popular across Europe. It is one of those names that manages to feel both classic and fresh simultaneously.
Irene
While primarily meaning “peace” in Greek, Irene shares its root syllable with Iris and has long been associated with the iris flower in French naming culture. It was extremely popular in France through the mid-20th century and has a dignified, slightly formal elegance.
Heather and Woodland Flowers
The French countryside has its own flora, and some of those native wildflowers have made their way into the naming tradition.
Bruyere
Bruyere comes from the French word for heather (bruyere) and has been used as a given name, particularly in rural French regions. It is rare and earthy, with a rugged natural beauty quite different from the more ornate floral names on this list.
Eglantine
Eglantine is the French name for the wild rose or sweetbriar (Rosa rubiginosa), and it has been used as a French given name since the Middle Ages. It is elaborate and romantic, with a medieval troubadour quality. The nickname Eglantyne also appears in historical British usage.
Lily Variants and Compound Names
French naming has a tradition of combining flower names with other elements to create longer, musical given names.
Lilou
Lilou is a French given name with roots in the Occitan and Provencal naming tradition, understood as a diminutive form related to lily. It became widely known in France after the film The Fifth Element (1997), in which it was used as a futuristic name. It is now genuinely popular in France and feels both modern and regional.
Liliane
Liliane is a French elaboration of Lily (from the Latin lilium), used as a given name in France and French-speaking Belgium since the 19th century. It has a mid-century French glamour to it and is associated with Liliane Bettencourt, the French billionaire heiress.
Amelie
Amelie is primarily a French form of Amelia, meaning “work,” but it has strong associations with the word amelie as a variant of anemone (the windflower) in some French regional dialects, and the name has been embraced within French flower naming culture broadly. The 2001 film Amelie made it internationally iconic. Note: the floral connection here is secondary and contested; the name’s primary meaning is Germanic. It is included in this broader section for its cultural resonance in French flower naming, not as a strict botanical meaning.
How to Choose the Right French Flower Name
The first thing to consider is sound. French flower names run from the short and crisp (Lys, Fleur, Iris) to the long and flowing (Florentine, Eglantine, Marguerite). Think about how the name will sound with your surname. A two-syllable last name tends to pair beautifully with a three-syllable French flower name. a long surname often calls for something shorter.
Think about how French you want the name to feel in daily use. Violette and Marguerite will be recognized as French immediately. Jasmine and Rose have been absorbed so thoroughly into English that the French origin is more background than foreground. Neither approach is wrong, but knowing which you want helps narrow the field.
Consider the nickname landscape. Marguerite gives you Margot. Rosalie gives you Rosa or Rosie. Liliane gives you Lily. If you love a longer, more elaborate French flower name but live somewhere where long names get clipped, make sure you also love where it naturally lands when shortened.
Finally, think about meaning beyond the flower itself. Suzanne carries the lily meaning within a name that has centuries of French literary and cultural history. Fleur is bracingly direct. Eglantine has a medieval romanticism. The flower is the entry point, but the full personality of the name is what your daughter will carry.
French flower names reward a little research. The less-familiar choices, Muguette, Pervenche, Rosine, Eglantine, are the ones most likely to feel genuinely distinctive on a child born today, precisely because they have been waiting quietly in the French tradition for someone to rediscover them.
