A common practice is to choose the last name as the childs given name such as Anderson Hutton Beckett Cohen Sutton Devlin Finley Monroe or Grey.
Rarely used unisex names. Lindsey is one of the few truly unisex names rather than being a name that has changed genders. Abilene is a much more untrodden path to the nickname AbbieAbbie than the Top 10 Abigail. Alex technically a nickname-name that works for both genders is another top choice.
Different spellings can make them genderless names. Other sources relate it to the Roman Tullius most notably the name of the philosopher Marcus Tullius Cicero sometimes anglicized as Tully. Avery A surname of English origin.
But at its peak in the early 1970s it was a Top 200 baby name for girls in the US given to nearly 2000 baby girls. A surname that is sometimes but rarely used as a first name. An occupational surname meaning sawer of wood in Middle English made famous by Mark Twain.
Tully is a relaxed rarely used Irish surname possibility. This unisex name is the French form of Sasha which actually comes from the name Alexander meaning defending men. Unisex Names Starting with A.
Umber This one is very rarely used. We think of gender-neutral names as names that are truly free of a specific gender identity while unisex names are names that are used for both sexes but may nevertheless skew more masculine or feminine. The Irish tulach means hill or mound while tuile means flood.
It was used in the late 19th and early 20th century for boys reaching the Top 400 in 1899 and is notable today for being one of the names most evenly divided between boys and girls. Unisex baby names that start with the letter A are led by Avery the Number 1 overall unisex name in the US today. Gender neutral baby names and unisex baby names are similar but not exactly the same.