How popular is the baby name Melinda in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Melinda.

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Popularity of the baby name Melinda


Posts that mention the name Melinda

Where did the baby name Melora come from in 1956?

The character Melora from the movie "Don't Go Near the Water" (1957)
Melora from “Don’t Go Near the Water

The mellifluous name Melora debuted in the U.S. baby name data in 1956:

  • 1959: 12 baby girls named Melora
  • 1958: 10 baby girls named Melora
  • 1957: unlisted
  • 1956: 7 baby girls named Melora [debut]
  • 1955: unlisted
  • 1954: unlisted

Where did it come from?

William Brinkley’s novel Don’t Go Near the Water, a military comedy that came out in mid-1956 and became the bestselling book in the country that year. The character Melora Alba, a native of the remote Pacific island of Tulura, was the love interest of main character Ensign Max Siegel of the U.S. Navy.

The name dropped out of the data the next year, and it may have remained a one-hit wonder if not for the late 1957 release of the movie Don’t Go Near the Water, in which Glenn Ford* and Gia Scala played Max and Melora. Right on cue, the name returned in 1958.

No one can pinpoint where Melora comes from or what it means, but we do know it was featured in the late 17th century Arthurian romance “Eachtra Mhelora agus Orlando,” Irish for “Adventures of Melora and Orlando.”

The name is still being given to babies these days, but usage rarely rises above a dozen babies per year.

Do you like the name Melora? Do you like it more or less than other Mel- names such as Melissa and Melinda?

*Glenn Ford’s birth name was Gwyllyn Ford. He based his stage name on Glenford, the name of the Canadian village where his father was born. His biography states that Gwyllyn is a Welsh form of William.

Sources:

Image: Screenshot of Don’t Go Near the Water (1957)

Baby name needed: Middle name for a girl named Reid

A reader named Andy writes:

My wife and I are looking at using “Reid” for a girl (we don’t know what we’re having but we have the boy named locked down). My middle name is Reid, which comes from my grandmother’s maiden name. We are struggling with a middle name to sandwich between Reid and our last name, Roney* (pronounced with a long O). We want it to identify that Reid is a girl’s name.

I think a clearly feminine middle is a great idea. Let’s see…how about:

Abigail
Alyssa
Amanda
Amelia
Anastasia
Angelina
Bianca
Calista
Elizabeth
Emilia
Felicia
Genevieve
Isabella
Johanna
Juliette
Kathleen
Louise
Lydia
Melinda
Nicola
Olivia
Sophia
Susan
Susannah
Sylvia
Vanessa

I avoided R-names for obvious reasons, but I’m now wondering: would a middle containing an R sound nice? I’m kind of on the fence about it, but who knows–maybe one the following could work:

Audrianna
Beatrice
Catrina
Gabriela
Katherine
Patricia
Sabrina
Victoria

Do you guys like any of the above with the first name Reid? What other middle names would you suggest to Andy?

*The actual surname is not Roney, but it’s similar.