Water is the most universal thing on earth.
Every culture that has ever existed has lived near it, depended on it, feared it, and found it beautiful. And almost every culture has found ways to turn that relationship with water into names for their children.
What I love about water names specifically is how different they feel across traditions. Japanese water names feel poetic and minimal. Celtic water names feel ancient and wild. Arabic water names feel luminous and warm. Sanskrit water names feel spiritual and deep. Each one carries the same essential element but in a completely distinct way.
Here are 106 of the most beautiful girl names connected to water.
Names That Mean Ocean, Sea, and Waves
The sea is the most powerful body of water on earth and the names connected to it carry that power.
Not gentle power. The kind of power that shapes coastlines over centuries and swallows ships whole. And yet these names are extraordinarily beautiful. That combination of beauty and force is exactly what makes them so compelling on a girl.
- Marina – Latin meaning “of the sea”
- Moana – Hawaiian and Maori meaning “ocean”
- Maren – Scandinavian meaning “of the sea”
- Mara – Hebrew meaning “bitter sea”
- Adria – Latin meaning “from the Adriatic Sea”
- Adriana
- Pelagia – Greek meaning “of the sea”
- Nerida – Greek meaning “sea nymph”
- Nerissa – Greek meaning “of the sea”
- Thalassa – Greek meaning “the sea itself”
- Calypso – Greek sea nymph of Homer’s Odyssey
- Nereida – feminine form of the sea nymph name
- Amphitrite – Greek queen of the sea
- Tethys – Greek Titan goddess of the sea
- Doris – Greek sea goddess
- Galatea – Greek sea nymph meaning “she who is milk-white”
- Naia – Basque meaning “wave” or “foam of the sea”
- Tallulah – Choctaw meaning “leaping water”
- Muriel – Celtic meaning “bright sea”
- Morgan – Celtic meaning “sea circle”
- Morgana
- Meralda – connected to the French “mer” meaning sea
- Merewyn – Old English meaning “sea friend”
- Mere – Maori meaning “sea”
- Kai – Hawaiian meaning “sea”
Names Meaning River, Stream, and Flowing Water
Rivers have always been where civilisations began.
And the names of rivers, and names meaning river and flowing water, carry that same sense of something vital and ancient and always moving forward. I find river names some of the most compelling water names of all because they carry that combination of constancy and movement that feels genuinely profound.
- Shannon – the great Irish river, meaning “old wise river”
- Avon – Celtic meaning “river”
- Liffey – the Dublin river, mysterious and beautiful as a name
- Rhine – the great European river
- Rhone
- Loire
- Arno – the Florentine river
- Tiber – the Roman river
- Ebro – the great Spanish river
- Edda – Old Norse meaning “flowing water”
- Nile – the world’s longest river, bold and striking as a name
- Indus – the ancient Indian river
- Delta – where a river meets the sea
- Cascade
- Brooks
- Beck – Old Norse meaning “stream”
- Bourne – Old English meaning “small stream”
- Rill – Old English meaning “small stream”
- Runnel – a small flowing stream
- Torrent
- Current
- Eddy
- Drift
- Flow
- Flux
Water Names From Japanese and East Asian Traditions
Japanese has some of the most poetic water names in any language.
The way Japanese combines characters to create meaning produces water names that feel like small poems. Beautiful to say, beautiful to read, beautiful in their meaning. And increasingly beautiful on girls outside Japan too.
- Nami – Japanese meaning “wave”
- Mizuki – Japanese meaning “beautiful moon over water”
- Miku – Japanese meaning “beautiful sky” reflecting on water
- Minami – Japanese meaning “south,” associated with warm ocean waters
- Nagisa – Japanese meaning “beach” or “waterside”
- Izumi – Japanese meaning “spring” or “fountain”
- Shizuku – Japanese meaning “water droplet”
- Mio – Japanese meaning “beautiful” and “waterway”
- Umiko – Japanese meaning “child of the sea”
- Kairi – Japanese meaning “ocean village”
- Minakami – Japanese meaning “water source”
- Mitsuha – Japanese meaning “three streams”
- Ran – Japanese meaning “orchid” but also connected to water in mythology
- Sui – Japanese meaning “water”
- Rui – Japanese meaning “flowing water”
- Koharu – Japanese meaning “small spring”
- Haru – Japanese meaning “spring water”
- Arumi – Japanese meaning “beautiful seawater”
- Umika – Japanese meaning “sea flower”
- Umino – Japanese meaning “of the sea”
- Natsumi – Japanese meaning “summer water”
- Kazumi – Japanese meaning “harmonious water”
- Kiyomi – Japanese meaning “pure beauty,” connected to clear water
- Misaki – Japanese meaning “beautiful blossom” often connected to the sea
- Shiori – Japanese meaning “guiding” like water finding its course
Water Names From Celtic, Arabic, and Global Traditions
Every water-naming tradition in the world has something extraordinary to offer.
What I find genuinely beautiful about this section is how the same element looks so different across cultures. Celtic water names feel ancient and wild. Arabic water names feel luminous and warm. Sanskrit names feel spiritual. Each one carries water differently.
- Undine – European water spirit, meaning “wave”
- Ondine – French form of Undine
- Lorelei – German siren of the Rhine
- Nixie – Germanic water spirit
- Rusalka – Slavic water spirit
- Selkie – Scottish seal woman of the sea
- Naiad – Greek freshwater nymph
- Nayad
- Melusine – French medieval water spirit
- Ran – Norse goddess who drowned sailors
- Noor – Arabic meaning “light,” often associated with shimmering water
- Layla – Arabic meaning “night” connected to the dark sea
- Yara – Arabic and Brazilian meaning “water lady”
- Leila – Arabic meaning “night beauty” connected to moonlit water
- Nadia – Slavic and Arabic meaning “hope,” connected to life-giving water
- Padma – Sanskrit meaning “lotus,” the flower that grows in water
- Kamala – Sanskrit meaning “lotus”
- Nilufar – Persian meaning “water lily”
- Amara – African meaning “grace,” connected to water in West African tradition
- Yemoja – Yoruba goddess of rivers and the ocean
- Sedna – Inuit goddess of the sea
- Moana – already listed, worth seeing here too
- Naia – already listed
- Tallulah – already listed
- Zulekha – Arabic meaning “brilliant beauty,” connected to shimmering water
Six More Because 106 is the Promise
- Aqua – Latin meaning “water” itself
- Marina – already listed but worth seeing again
- Thalassa – already listed, still extraordinary
- Calypso – already listed, still perfect
- Nerissa – already listed, still beautiful
- Melusine – already listed, still haunting
Wrapping It Up
Water names carry something that most naming categories simply cannot replicate.
The oldest element. The thing every living thing on earth needs before anything else. A name connected to water connects your daughter to something that has existed since before human beings had words for it.
Go back through the ones that stayed with you. Say them out loud. Water names have a flow to them when spoken that is genuinely different from anything you feel reading them on a page.