Cloe

Meaning of Cloe

Cloe, an alternative spelling of the classical Greek name Chloe (Χλόη), traces its linguistic ancestry to an agrarian metaphor signifying a “young green shoot,” a meaning that in antiquity served both as poetic imagery for spring’s renewal and as an honorific epithet for Demeter, goddess of the harvest; filtered through early Christian transmission—most notably the fleeting reference to a woman named Chloe in the First Epistle to the Corinthians—the designation retained its rustic connotations while acquiring a reputation for modest piety. In Anglo-American contexts, Cloe is conventionally pronounced KLOH, and its streamlined orthography, first attested in English records of the eighteenth century, has periodically resurfaced among parents who favor familiar phonetics yet wish to differentiate their daughters from the more common Chloe. Although contemporary United States birth data place the name outside the upper echelons of popularity—hovering in the 800s and 900s since the turn of the millennium—the persistence of annual registrations testifies to a quiet, generational continuity: Cloe endures as a subtle nod to classical heritage, agrarian symbolism, and understated individuality rather than as a reaction to transient fashion cycles.

Pronunciation

British English

  • Pronunced as KLOH (/kləʊ/)

American English

  • Pronunced as KLOH (/kloʊ/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Cloe

Cloe and Holly Mackie -
Cloé Lacasse -
Miranda Richardson
Curated byMiranda Richardson

Assistant Editor