Echo

#95 in Kentucky

Meaning of Echo

Echo traces its roots to ancient Greek myth, where the talkative mountain nymph was condemned to repeat only the last words she heard—a cautionary tale that lends the name a quietly ironic charm for the modern chatterbox. In English, it is pronounced EK-oh, and its crisp, two-beat cadence flatters both girls and boys, making it one of the rarer genuinely unisex options. Parents drawn to science as much as story often appreciate that an “echo” is also the returning sound wave engineers measure in decibels—proof that the name straddles poetry and physics with equal poise. Usage in the United States has hovered in the high-700s to low-800s since the 1990s, suggesting a steady cult following rather than a fleeting trend. Echo therefore offers an intriguing mix of classical pedigree, acoustic imagery, and statistical obscurity—ideal for families who like their favorites a little off the beaten path yet easy on the ear.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as EK-oh (/ˈɛk.oʊ/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

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Similar Names to Echo

Notable People Named Echo

Echo -
Echo Kellum -
Diana Michelle Redwood
Curated byDiana Michelle Redwood

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