Savannah Name for American Foxhound

/savanah/S-Av-An-Ah
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female
southern charm
uncommon
coast
grace

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Savannah Name Details

Meaning

“Savannah” tastes of salt air, live oaks, and brick lanes—an old-South palette that flatters a graceful foxhound stride. The name moves like tidewater: broad, unhurried, quietly confident. It frames your hound as a welcome sight on morning loops, her white-tipped tail sketching cursive hellos through coastal light.

Etymology

From Taino via Spanish, meaning treeless plain; as a place-name, tied to the storied Southern city of Savannah, Georgia.

Why this name for American Foxhound

Four soft syllables keep your tone smooth during leash work and busy plazas, which helps a scent-driven hound think instead of surge. The name’s travel-postcard charm draws friendly engagement, giving your dog the social affirmation a pack animal relishes. On trails, its cadence is clear without being sharp.

Similar names

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Magnolia

“Magnolia” carries porch-swing breezes, white blossoms, and the gracious cadence of the South—terrain where American Foxhounds long found their stride. It wraps a vigorous breed in honeyed manners, without denying the mud on paws and the song in the throat. The name suggests a lady who can sprint the hedgerow and still greet guests with velvet-soft eyes.

Named for botanist Pierre Magnol; the magnolia tree symbolizes Southern elegance and steadfast beauty.

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Jolene

“Jolene” carries steel beneath sweetness—lilting vowels over a steadfast core—perfect for a foxhound who sings her mind and then leans in for affection. The name feels porch-pickin’ and heartfelt, fitting a breed whose bay can be music and whose loyalty can mend tired days.

Modern American name popularized by country music; probable blend of “Jo” and “Eileen,” associated with heartfelt, soulful storytelling.

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Biscuit

“Biscuit” is warm kitchen light and flour dust in the air—the domestic reward after muddy miles. It celebrates a foxhound’s knack for turning hard work into simple pleasures: a belly rub, a nap by the oven, a crumb tax paid in smiles. The name makes comfort a virtue without dimming the breed’s spark.

From Latin “bis coctus” (twice baked); in Southern culture, a symbol of hospitality and homestyle comfort.

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Honey

“Honey” drips with endearment—kitchen cupboard warmth for a breed that adores its people. It suits a foxhound’s soulful eyes and gentle lean, reminding everyone that behind the miles is a tender heart. The name makes kindness default: a soft word, a gentle brush, a contented sigh on quilted beds.

Old English “hunig”; metaphor for sweetness and affection in Southern speech and beyond.

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Delta

“Delta” carries mud-rich fields, blues riffs, and river patience—slow power gathered over distance. It honors a foxhound’s steady engine: not flashy sprints but hours of purposeful trotting. The name suggests a dog who reads wind and water like staves of music, then bays her verse true.

Greek letter Δ; geographically, a river mouth’s fan of deposits. In American culture, evokes the Mississippi Delta and its musical heritage.

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Lady

“Lady” bestows an immediate sense of grace on an American Foxhound, as if she’s a gentlewoman of the canine world. The name has an old-fashioned refinement, conjuring images of well-mannered hounds resting at the feet of aristocracy after the hunt. For a breed known to be sweet and sociable, “Lady” highlights those polite, affectionate tendencies, wrapping them in an aura of dignity. It transforms a sometimes rambunctious hound into the very picture of composure and charm—at least in name.

Originally an English noble title for a woman of high rank, from Old English “hlǣfdīge” meaning “bread-kneader” (a lady of the house). It became a common affectionate name for female dogs to denote a well-loved, well-behaved pet.

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Tawny

“Tawny” names the warm fawn wash often seen along a foxhound’s flanks and ears. It feels elegant without fuss, like a silk scarf worn to the barn. The word lives between color and mood—sun-warmed grasses, mellow afternoons, a dog that moves through both with feline smoothness and hound honesty.

From Old French “tanné” (tanned), meaning warm brownish-yellow; long used in English to describe animal coats and natural hues.

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nature-inspired
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Beau

“Beau” is easy charm: a gentleman’s nod and a wag in one syllable. It suits a foxhound whose friendliness opens gates and conversations across farm roads and town squares. The name rides light yet dignified, flattering a dog with a glossy coat, steady eye, and that signature, good-natured grin after a long gallop.

French for “handsome” or “admirer,” adopted in Southern vernacular to mean a charming gentleman.

Total likes: 0
male
southern charm
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gentleman
ease

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