Angeline drifts through history on gossamer wings, beginning with the Greek word “angelos,” meaning messenger, sliding gracefully into Latin as “Angelina,” and then finding its chic, café-lit home in France before hopping the Atlantic. In English, she’s AN-juh-leen, while her Parisian cousin answers to the soft, nose-tingling ahn-zhe-LEEN—either way, the name feels like a sunbeam breaking through stained glass. Storybooks whisper of Saint Angeline of Marsciano, a 14th-century Italian noble who traded silk for service and founded homes for the poor—proof that this name carries both halo and heart. Today, Angeline sits quietly in the middle of U.S. charts, never clamoring for attention yet always glimmering like a hidden courtyard in Seville: intimate, timeless, a little bit magical. Parents drawn to her hear more than a name; they hear the rustle of feathers, the echo of church bells, and perhaps a playful promise—after all, who could misbehave with “angel” built right in? Warm, lyrical, and kissed with Old World romance, Angeline offers a passport to grace for any niña ready to spread her own wings.
| Angeline Quinto - | 
| Angeline Boulley - | 
| Angeline Mabula - | 
| Angeline Morrison - | 
| Angeline Makore - |