Browse names with 8 letters or more. Longer names often feel distinguished and formal. See personality ratings for each name.
Longer names (eight letters or more) carry a sense of formality, distinction, and elegance. They tend to score higher on Warmth and Morality because their extended syllable structures feel more elaborate and considered. Many long names also offer built-in nickname options, giving the child flexibility as they grow. Names like Gabriella, Nathaniel, and Valentina illustrate how length creates a richer phonetic impression.
Showing 61-120 of 229 names
Success: 58
Morality: 97
Success: 56
Morality: 50
Morality: 60
Morality: 101
Morality: 72
Health: 77
Success: 60
Success: 61
Success: 44
Success: 59
Health: 78
Morality: 46
Success: 49
Morality: 61
Success: 58
Success: 69
Success: 69
Morality: 61
Morality: 86
Success: 68
Cheerfulness: 51
Morality: 50
Morality: 54
Morality: 28
Warmth: 40
Cheerfulness: 55
Morality: 51
Cheerfulness: 42
Success: 66
Success: 69
Success: 71
Success: 56
Warmth: 95
Warmth: 63
Success: 53
Morality: 46
Success: 59
Morality: 84
Health: 50
Success: 61
Health: 59
Cheerfulness: 63
Success: 57
Warmth: 65
Success: 83
Warmth: 64
Cheerfulness: 61
Success: 62
Morality: 55
Morality: 73
Health: 65
Cheerfulness: 66
Warmth: 61
Success: 62
Morality: 75
Morality: 40
Warmth: 42
Warmth: 62
Based on psychology research, the top long names include Adelaide, Adrienne, Alastair, Aldridge, Alexander. There are 229 names in this category, each rated across 5 perception dimensions.
Name Halo has 229 long names in our database. Each name is rated for success, warmth, morality, health, and cheerfulness based on US psychology research.
Name Halo defines long names as those with 8 letters or more. Research shows name length affects perception, with longer names sounding more formal and distinguished.
Name Halo's scores are derived from published psychology research by Dr. Albert Mehrabian at UCLA. Participants rated over 1,700 names across personality dimensions, producing consistent perception scores that reveal how names shape first impressions.