How popular is the baby name Signe 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 Signe.

The graph will take a few moments to load. (Don't worry, it shouldn't take 9 months!) If it's taking too long, try reloading the page.


Popularity of the baby name Signe


Posts that mention the name Signe

Popular baby names in Denmark, 2014

Flag of Denmark
Flag of Denmark

According to data from Statistics Denmark, the most popular baby names in the country in 2014 were Emma and William.

Here are Denmark’s top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2014:

Girl Names

  1. Emma
  2. Sofia
  3. Ida
  4. Freja
  5. Clara
  6. Laura
  7. Anna
  8. Ella
  9. Isabella
  10. Karla

Boy Names

  1. William
  2. Noah
  3. Lucas
  4. Oscar
  5. Victor
  6. Malthe
  7. Emil
  8. Frederik
  9. Oliver
  10. Magnus

New to the girls’ top 10 are Ella and Karla, which replaced Sofie and Josefine.

New to the boys’ top 10 is Malthe, which replaced Alexander.

Malthe jumped from 22nd place in 2013 to 6th last year likely because of a 14-year-old contestant on Denmark’s Voice Junior named Malthe. (He has brothers named Asbjørn and Halfdan, btw.)

The boy names Nohr, Sander, Asger and the girl names Signe, Liv, Alba, Aya all entered the top 50 in 2014.

Sources: Names of newborn children, Denmark’s top baby names revealed

Image: Adapted from Flag of Denmark (public domain)

Where did the baby name Seena come from in 1917?

Movie actress Seena Owen (1894-1966)
Seena Owen

First there was Francelia. Then there was Ormi. And today we have Seena — the third name (I know of) to debut on the U.S. baby name charts thanks to the influence of a silent film actress.

That actress was Seena Owen, and she’s a special case, as she’s the first actress on my list to become popular under a stage name.

Signe Auen was born in Washington state in 1894. Her parents were immigrants from Denmark, and she had older siblings named Lillie (who became a screenwriter) and Audun.

The Scandinavian name Signe can be traced back to the Old Norse name Signý, which is made up on the elements sigr, meaning “victory,” and , meaning “new.”

Signe Auen began appearing in films in late 1914.

Photograph of actress Signe Auen in Photoplay magazine, October of 1915
Signe Auen (Oct. 1915)

In 1915, there was an uptick in the number of babies named Signe according to the U.S. baby name data:

Girls named SignePeople named Signe (SSDI)
19185155
19175250
19164255
191567†73
19144570
19134676
19124392
†Peak usage

(I added data from the Social Security Death Index as well. For the SSDI numbers — which were declining during the 1910s, after peaking in the 1890s and 1900s — I only counted people who had Signe as a first name, not as a middle.)

Sometime during the last half of 1915 Signe Auen changed her name to “Seena Owen” — the phonetic spelling of her Danish name.

Photograph of actress Seena Owen in Photoplay magazine, March of 1916
As “Seena Owen” (Mar. 1916)

And in 1917, the baby name Seena debuted in the U.S. baby name data:

Girls named SeenaPeople named Seena (SSDI)
1920.2
191964
1918.4
19175*4
1916.1
1915.2
1914.4
*Debut

Numbers from both the SSA and the SSDI show that usage of the name Seena, which has always been relatively low, was at its highest during the 1920s.

This matches up pretty well with Seena Owen’s film career, which lasted from the late 1910s until the early 1930s, when Owen retired from acting due to the advent of talkies.

Which name do you like more, Signe or Seena?

P.S. Did you know that Seena Owen was the first person to wear false eyelashes? Director David Llewelyn “D. W.” Griffith had a wig maker invent the first set of eyelash extensions for Owen to wear in his 1916 epic film Intolerance.

Sources: Seena Owen – Wikipedia, Signý – Behind the Name