Baby name generator
Type both parents' names and get blends built from your actual sounds – a name that carries a piece of each of you.
Why blend names at all?
Plenty of cultures already do it. Spanish-speaking families have long fused parents' names (Juan + Marisol gives Juansol or Marijuan), and Turkish families sometimes merge grandparents' names for a firstborn. A blended name solves a real argument: nobody's family name wins, because both do.
It also produces names that are rare without being strange. A blend like Emlia or Jamessa reads naturally but won't appear three times in the same classroom.
What to do with a shortlist
Say each candidate out loud with your surname. Check the initials. Then look the name up in our meaning search – blends sometimes land on real names with histories of their own. If you want alternatives from a specific tradition, the country guides cover more than 60 of them.
Common questions
How are the name suggestions made?+
The generator splits each parent's name into its natural sounds and recombines them: the start of one with the ending of the other, first syllables together, and a few less obvious mixes. Everything runs in your browser.
Does it work with Turkish, Arabic or accented names?+
Yes. The syllable logic handles accented characters, so Ayşe + João produces usable blends just like Emma + James does.
Is it free?+
Completely. No account, no email, no limit on how many times you run it.
The blends sound odd. Any tips?+
Try nicknames or middle names as inputs, or swap which name goes first. Short inputs give short blends. Some pairs simply fight each other, and that's half the fun.