Everlie, a luminous twist on the Old English place-name Everly—“the boar’s meadow”—feels like a fiesta in a flowering English garden: equal parts sturdy countryside and swirling flamenco skirt. Legend has it that medieval villagers used Everlie to describe a clearing where wild boars roamed, yet today the name sashays across playgrounds with bell-like grace, its three sparkling syllables (EV-er-lee) chiming as brightly in Birmingham as in Barcelona. Over the last decade, American parents have quietly warmed to its melody—watch it climb from a whisper of five newborns in 2010 to more than sixty little Everlies in 2024—proving that subtle charm can outpace noisy trends. Everlie carries an undercurrent of valor from those bold boars, but she softens the edges with a breezy “-ie” ending that invites instant nicknames (Evie, Ever, Lee). Think of her as a young heroine strolling through a sun-dappled meadow, laughter mingling with birdsong, ready to write her own chapters in both English and Español with effortless poise—and perhaps a mischievous wink.