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Babies · Middle name ideas

Middle names for Wilder

If you've landed on Wilder, you're in a particular kind of company — parents who like the sound of it but worry it might be too soft alone, too short, too common, too uncommon. Below are twenty-six middles that fix whatever the issue is. Or that just sound right.

The list isn't ranked. Some are obvious. Some take a second.

  1. GraceOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  2. JamesThe contemporary first softens against the older middle.
  3. HenryBoth names hold up across a lifetime — preschool to retirement.
  4. ShoreOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  5. FrostThe clipped middle sharpens the softer first.
  6. SnowOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  7. GlenShort middles after two-beat firsts always sound a little decisive.
  8. NorthThe clipped middle sharpens the softer first.
  9. OrionQuietly good. The kind of name people compliment without explaining why.
  10. SunBoth names point in the same direction.
  11. SteelOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  12. PearlShort middles after two-beat firsts always sound a little decisive.
  13. CoalQuietly good. The kind of name people compliment without explaining why.
  14. PlumQuietly good. The kind of name people compliment without explaining why.
  15. PearlShort middles after two-beat firsts always sound a little decisive.
  16. JaneNew name, old anchor.
  17. FrostThe clipped middle sharpens the softer first.
  18. CashQuietly good. The kind of name people compliment without explaining why.
  19. BrooksThe combination doesn't fight itself.
  20. FernThe clipped middle sharpens the softer first.
  21. SaintOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  22. QuickLooks good written down. Sounds better said.
  23. AriaQuietly good. The kind of name people compliment without explaining why.
  24. KnoxOne-syllable middles hit like a closing door — this one closes well.
  25. OttilieThe middle finishes what the first starts.
  26. RiggsShort middles after two-beat firsts always sound a little decisive.