Margaret comes from the Greek margarītēs, 'pearl,' which passed through Latin margarita into the languages of medieval Europe. Its early fame owes much to Saint Margaret of Antioch, one of the most venerated virgin-martyrs of the Middle Ages, whose legend of emerging unharmed from a dragon made her a patron of childbirth and one of the 'voices' later heard by Joan of Arc.
Borne by queens, saints and a British princess, Margaret has an air of dignified, timeless elegance — a proper, luminous name with the quiet richness of the gem it describes. It reached its height in the early-to-mid twentieth century and now carries a beloved vintage charm, ripe for revival.
Few names offer such a generous spread of affectionate forms: Maggie, Meg, Peggy, Greta, Rita and Daisy (after the French marguerite) all trace back to it. From Margaret Atwood to NASA's Margaret Hamilton, it signals substance and grace.
Margaret is depth disguised as decorum. Her defining trait is loyalty — a flawless, off-the-charts 10 — paired with a stability so solid you could build a house on it. This is the friend who has known you for forty years and will know you for forty more; devotion, for a Margaret, isn't a mood, it is a constitution. Her name means 'pearl,' and she embodies it: something formed slowly, quietly, under pressure, and treasured for a lifetime.
But don't file her under 'sweet and predictable.' Beneath the composed surface runs a rich vein of sensitivity (8) and imagination (7) — Margaret feels things deeply and has a private inner world far more colourful than her measured exterior lets on. Her namesake, Saint Margaret of Antioch, supposedly emerged unharmed from the belly of a dragon, and that is the perfect image for her: gentle on the outside, unbreakable within. Cross a Margaret's people and you will meet that dragon-slaying steel.
Notably, her ambition (4) and need for attention (3) both run low — she is not chasing applause or titles. She would rather be the quiet, luminous centre that holds everything together, the grandmother-wise soul in a younger body. Think of Margaret Atwood's piercing intelligence or Margaret Hamilton coding the software that landed Apollo on the Moon — brilliance delivered without fanfare.
And then there is her sheer, generous versatility of self, mirrored in her nicknames: she can be a warm, jam-making Maggie, a spirited Peggy, a chic Greta, or a stately Margaret depending on the day. Vintage, dignified and quietly magnetic, a Margaret is the pearl at the centre of any family — understated, patient, endlessly loyal, and far stronger than she will ever let on.
Playful portrait, for entertainment.
Margaret loves like a pearl forms: in silence, under pressure, layer by heavy, luminous layer. She does not splash; she accumulates. Seduction for her is not a loud proclamation but a slow, iridescent reveal. She is drawn to those who possess depth, those who can withstand the friction of her guarded heart without shattering. To win her, you must be patient, willing to navigate the rough, unyielding exterior to find the soft, warm core within. She looses speed, superficiality, and the chaotic noise of those who demand instant gratification. Her desire is for a connection that endures, polished by time and shared trials. She seeks a partner who appreciates the subtle play of light, who understands that true value is not flashy but enduring. In her arms, you find a calm, crystalline intensity. It is a love that demands respect, offers profound loyalty, and glows with a quiet, fierce brilliance that only those who truly know her can fully appreciate.
It means 'pearl,' from the Greek margarītēs via the Latin margarita.
Most famously Margaret of Antioch, an early virgin-martyr whose legend of surviving a dragon made her a patron of childbirth; her feast is July 20.
It evolved through the rhyming chain Margaret to Meg to Meggy to Peggy — a common medieval habit of swapping the first letter.
It peaked in the early twentieth century and now reads as elegantly vintage, which is exactly why it is being rediscovered by new parents.
Maggie, Meg, Peggy, Margie, Greta, Rita and even Daisy are all used.
Playful profile, for entertainment.