[name_u]Sawyer[/name_u]
[name_f]Mabel[/name_f]
[name_f]Pandora[/name_f]/[name_f]Persephone[/name_f]
[name_f]Xanthe[/name_f]
[name_f]Cora[/name_f]
[name_f]Theodora[/name_f]/[name_f]Philippa[/name_f]
[name_f]Adeline[/name_f]
[name_u]Sawyer[/name_u]
[name_f]Mabel[/name_f]
[name_f]Pandora[/name_f]/[name_f]Persephone[/name_f]
[name_f]Xanthe[/name_f]
[name_f]Cora[/name_f]
[name_f]Theodora[/name_f]/[name_f]Philippa[/name_f]
[name_f]Adeline[/name_f]
This was an accident–ignore, please…
[name_u]Sawyer[/name_u] indicates a liking for male names or surnames for girls. Like [name_f]McKenna[/name_f], [name_u]McKinley[/name_u], [name_u]Madison[/name_u]. Someone perhaps who doesn’t want her daughter to have a flowery or frilly name or nickname. I can see a female attorney called [name_u]Sawyer[/name_u].
[name_f]Mabel[/name_f] (MY style!) is an old-fashioned namer who loves nostalgic names.
[name_f]Pandora[/name_f]/[name_f]Persephone[/name_f] is named by someone into mythology/fantasy who is not bothered by the name meanings/stories. [name_f]Pandora[/name_f] is one thing to me, but [name_f]Persephone[/name_f] strikes me a pretty sound but do you want a victim name for your daughter? Like naming your son [name_m]Caliban[/name_m], geesh.
[name_f]Xanthe[/name_f], an adventurous namer, someone like me who loves the Z sound and the last less common half of the alphabet.
[name_f]Cora[/name_f] seems to me of a piece with [name_f]Mabel[/name_f], although [name_f]Cora[/name_f] rose due to Downton [name_u]Abbey[/name_u], so perhaps this is a namer who is inspired by pop culture.
[name_f]Theodora[/name_f]/[name_f]Phillipa[/name_f] - maybe an anglophile, a literary person, someone of intelligence and taste.
[name_f]Adeline[/name_f], whoa, this is hard because I think [name_f]Adeline[/name_f] is so ugly. Personal preference, but the sound is both adenoidal and what… it makes me think of the word nostril for some reason.