The Beatles: Songs with Girls, Women and Ladies Names in Titles and Lyrics
Anna, Bonnie, Carol, Clarabella, Eleanor, Joan, Jude, Julia, Lil, Lizzy, Loretta, Lucille, Lucy, Madonna, Maggie Mae, Martha, Mary, Mary Jane, Michelle, Molly, Nancy, Pam, Penny, Prudence, Rita, Rose, Rosemary, Sadie, Sally, Suzy, Valerie, Vera
- "Anna (Go To Him)" - Please Please Me - 1963
- "My Bonnie" - 1962
- "Carol" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Clarabella" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Eleanor Rigby" - Revolver - 1968
- Joan - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- "Julia" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1938
- Lil - "Rocky Raccoon" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" - Help! - 1965
- Loretta - "Get Back" - Single - 1969
- "Lucille" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- "Lady Madonna" - Single - 1968
- "Maggie Mae" - Let It Be - 1970
- "Martha My Dear" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Mary - "Let It Be" - Let It Be - 1970
- "What's the New Mary Jane" - Anthology 3 - 1996
- "Michelle" - Rubber Soul - 1965
- Molly - "Obladi, Oblada" - The Beatles - 1968
- Nancy - "Rocky Raccoon"
- "Polythene Pam" - Abbey Road - 1969
- "Dear Prudence" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Lovely Rita" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Rose - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- Rosemary - "Give Peace A Chance" by John Lennon - Single - 1969
- "Sexy Sadie" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Long Tall Sally" - Long Tall Sally EP - 1964
- "Suzy Parker" - Let It Be (Film) - 1970
- Valerie - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- Vera - "When I’m Sixty-Four" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Not About Girls
- Anna
- "Anna (Go To Him)" - Please Please Me - 1963
- Covered - Originally performed by Arthur Alexander - 1962
- Anna (Go to Him) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Arthur Alexander - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Other Covers:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Anna (Go To Him)
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Anna (Go To Him)
- "Anna (Go To Him)" - Please Please Me - 1963
- Bonnie
- "My Bonnie"
- 1962
- This song was recorded by Tony Sheridan and the Beat Brothers, who later became The Beatles
- My Bonnie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "My Bonnie"
- 1962
- Carol
- "Carol"
- Live at the BBC - 1963
- Covered - Originally performed by Chuck Berry - 1958
- Live at the BBC (The Beatles album) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Chuck Berry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Other Covers:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Carol
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Carol
- "Carol"
- Live at the BBC - 1963
- Clarabella
- "Clarabella"
- Live at the BBC - 1963
- Covered - Originally performed by The Jodimars, written by Mike Pingitore
- Live at the BBC (The Beatles album) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Jodimars - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Mike Pingitore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Clarabella"
- Live at the BBC - 1963
- Eleanor
- "Eleanor Rigby" - Revolver - 1968
- McCartney said he came up with the name Eleanor from actress Eleanor Bron, who had starred with the Beatles in the film Help!. Rigby came from the name of a store in Bristol, Rigby & Evens Ltd, Wine & Spirit Shippers, that he noticed while seeing his then-girlfriend Jane Asher act in The Happiest Days Of Your Life. He recalled in 1984, "I just liked the name. I was looking for a name that sounded natural. Eleanor Rigby sounded natural."
- In the 1980s, a grave of an Eleanor Rigby was discovered in the graveyard of St. Peter's Parish Church in Woolton, Liverpool, and a few yards away from that, another tombstone with the last name McKenzie scrawled across it. During their teenage years, McCartney and Lennon spent time "sunbathing" there; within earshot distance of where the two had met for the first time during a fete in 1957. Many years later McCartney stated that the strange coincidence between reality and lyric could be a product of his subconscious, rather than being a meaningless fluke. The actual Eleanor Rigby was born in 1895 and lived in Liverpool, possibly in the suburb of Woolton, where she married a man named Thomas Woods. She died on 10 October 1939 at age 44, which, because 1940 was a leap year, was exactly one year to the day before Lennon was born. Whether this Eleanor was the inspiration for the song or not, her tombstone has become a landmark to Beatles fans visiting Liverpool
- Text Source: Eleanor Rigby - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Eleanor Rigby (1895 - 1939) - Find A Grave Memorial: FindAGrave.com

- Covered:
- Second Hand Songs - Song: Eleanor Rigby - The Beatles: SecondHandSongs.com
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- P.P. Arnold - First Cut
- Joan Baez - Joan - 1967
- Tony Bennett - Tony Sings the Great Hits of Today - 1969
- Liane Carroll - Standard Issue - 2005
- Ray Charles - Portrait of Ray - 1968
- David Cook
- On American Idol
- De Danann - A Jacket of Batteries - 1988
- Dirt Poor Robins - The Greatest of Earth on Show
- Elevator Suite - Elevator Suite - 2007
- Esperanto - Last Tango - 1975
- Ethel the Frog - 1979
- Kristin Farr - 2007
- The Four Tops - The Four Tops Now! - 1969
- Aretha Franklin - This Girl's in Love with You - 1970
- Point of view is switch to first person
- This Girl's in Love with You - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Gaylads - 1972
- Bobbie Gentry - Local Gentry - 1968
- Godhead - 2000 Years of Human Error - 2001
- The Idea of North - Live at the Powerhouse - 1997
- Ides of March - Vechicle
- Jazz Crusaders
- Instrumental
- JazzCrusaders.com

- Wayne Johnson - Kindred Spirits - 1995
- Stanley Jordan - Magic Touch - 1985
- Kansas - Always Never the Same - 1998
- John LaBarbera - Wild Side
- La Conjura - 1000 km Para Ver
- Los Tipitos - Quien va a garpar todo esto? - 2001
- Wes Montgomery - A Day in the Life - 1967
- Nite Liters - 1970
- Pain - Nothing Remains the Same - 2002
- Eddie Ojeda - Axes 2 Axes - 2006
- The Outside Royalty - 2006
- Panic at the Disco
- Covered Live
- PanicAtTheDisco.com

- John Pizzarelli
- Instrumental
- JohnPizzarelli.com

- Realm - Endless War - 1988
- Junior Reid - One Blood - 1990
- Sacred Rite - Is nothing Sacred
- David Schommer (feat. David Jensen) - Accepted - Soundtrack - 2006
- The Supremes
- Tangerine Dream - Dream Encores - 1996
- The Temptations
- Thrice - If We Could Only See Us Now - 2005
- Twelfth Night - Fact and Fiction - 1982
- Uranium - 1979
- Caetano Veloso - Qualquer coisa - 1975
- The Violet Burning - Strength - 1992
- Doodles Weaver - Feetlebaum Returns!
- Mark Wood - These Are a Few of My Favorite Things - 2003
- Zoot - 1970
- Second Hand Songs - Song: Eleanor Rigby - The Beatles: SecondHandSongs.com
- "Eleanor Rigby" - Revolver - 1968
- Joan
- Joan - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- Steve Martin does a cover of this song in the movie "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" in 1978
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Maxwell's Silver Hammer - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Joan - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Julia
- "Julia"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1938
- "Julia" was written for John's mother Julia Lennon (1914-1958), who was knocked down and killed by a car driven by a drunk off-duty police officer when John was 17 years old. It was also written for his future wife Yoko Ono, whose first name, which literally means "child of the sea" in Japanese, is echoed in lyrics such as "Oceanchild, calls me." An alternative theory suggests that the song was written for Julian Lennon, John's son.
- The first two lines of the song – "Half of what I say is meaningless/ But I say it just to reach you, Julia" – were adapted from the poem "Sand and Foam," by the Lebanese poet Kahlil Gibran. The original line is: "Half of what I say is meaningless; but I say it so that the other half may reach you." The line, "When I cannot sing my heart/I can only speak my mind" is taken from the line, "When life does not find a singer to sing her heart she produces a philosopher to speak her mind," from the same work.
- Text Source: Julia (The Beatles song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Julia - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Bongwater - Double Bummer - 1988
- Chocolate Genius
- Sean Lennon - Come Together: A Night for John Lennon's Words and Music - 2001
- Ramsey Lewis
- Medeski Martin & Wood - Out Louder - 2006
- Baptiste Trotignon
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Julia - The Beatles
- "Julia"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1938
- Lil
- Lil - "Rocky Raccoon"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Rocky Raccoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Rocky Raccoon - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Rocky Raccoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Lil - "Rocky Raccoon"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Lizzy
- "Dizzy Miss Lizzy"
- Help! - 1965
- Covered - Originally Performed by Larry Williams - Single - 1958
- Dizzy Miss Lizzy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Help! (album) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Larry Williams - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Other Covers:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Dizzy Miss Lizzy - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Dizzy Miss Lizzy - The Beatles
- "Dizzy Miss Lizzy"
- Help! - 1965
- Loretta
- Loretta - "Get Back"
- Get Back - 1969
- "Get Back" is a song by The Beatles, written primarily by Paul McCartney and credited to Lennon/McCartney. The song was originally released as a single on 11 April 1969 and credited to "The Beatles with Billy Preston." It later became the closing track of Let It Be (1970), which was The Beatles' last album released before the group formally split. The single reached number one in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia, France, West Germany, and Mexico. It was The Beatles' only single that credited another artist (Preston), although Tony Sheridan had shared billing with The Beatles on his own single "My Bonnie" when issued in the UK in 1962 (and again in 1964).
- "Get Back" was The Beatles' first single release in true stereo in the U.S. In the UK, Beatles singles remained monaural until the following release, "The Ballad of John and Yoko."
- "Get Back" is unusual in The Beatles' canon in that almost every moment of the song's evolution has been extensively documented, from its beginning as an offhand riff to its final mixing. Much of this documentation is in the form of illegal (but widely available) bootleg recordings, and is recounted in the book Get Back: The Unauthorized Chronicle of The Beatles' Let It Be Disaster by Doug Sulpy and Ray Schweighardt.
- The song's melody grew out of some unstructured jamming on 7 January 1969 during rehearsal sessions on the sound stage at Twickenham Studios. Over the next few minutes McCartney introduced some of the lyrics, reworking "Get back to the place you should be" from fellow Beatle George Harrison's "Sour Milk Sea" into "Get back to where you once belonged." McCartney had played bass on Jackie Lomax's recording of the song a few months earlier. For the press release to promote the "Get Back" single McCartney wrote, "We were sitting in the studio and we made it up out of thin air... we started to write words there and then...when we finished it, we recorded it at Apple Studios and made it into a song to roller-coast by."
- The released version of the song is composed of two verses, with an intro, outro, and several refrains. The first verse tells the story of a man named Jojo, who leaves his home in Tucson, Arizona, for some "California grass." (Paul's soon-to-be wife Linda had attended the University of Arizona in Tucson.) The second verse is about a sexually ambiguous character "Loretta Martin" who "thought she was a woman, but she was another man." The single version includes a coda urging Loretta to "get back" where she belongs, as well.
- The Beatles often played around with their lyrics during recording sessions, as evidenced by Lennon's introduction on the Let it Be album: "Sweet Loretta Fart, she thought she was a cleaner, but she was a frying pan". The album version of the song famously ends with John Lennon quipping "I'd like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves, and I hope we passed the audition".
- Around the time he was developing the lyrics to "Get Back", McCartney satirised the "Rivers of Blood speech" by former British Cabinet minister Enoch Powell in a brief jam that has become known as the "Commonwealth Song". The lyrics included a line "You'd better get back to your Commonwealth homes". The "Commonwealth Song" had no musical resemblance to "Get Back", but gives insight into the thinking behind the song's lyrics. On 9 January the group introduced what has become known in Beatles folklore as the "No Pakistanis" version. This version is more racially charged, satirising right wing attitudes - (we) "don't dig no Pakistanis taking all the people's jobs".
- The song was further developed into what McCartney described as a "protest song", and in subsequent rehearsal takes (one of which John Lennon sings) the immigration theme is developed into a full verse. By mid-January the song had developed into three verses: The first being the "Loretta Martin" verse, the second being the "Jo-jo" verse and the third the "Pakistanis verse". Whilst heard by Beatles fans on bootleg for over a decade the lyrics to the third verse are not widely known:
- "Meanwhile back at home there's nineteen Pakistanis,
Living in a council flat
Candidate for Labour tells them what the plan is,
Then he tells them where its at"
- "Meanwhile back at home there's nineteen Pakistanis,
- Another version of the "Pakistanis verse", in what is claimed to be the entire song in John's handwriting, is on display in the Hard Rock Cafe in San Francisco. In this version, the Pakistani verse is:
- "Meanwhile back at home too many Pakistanis,
Living in a council flat
Candidate Macmillan, tell us what your plan is,
Won't you tell us where you're at"
- "Meanwhile back at home too many Pakistanis,
- In an interview in Playboy magazine in 1980, Lennon described it as "...a better version of 'Lady Madonna'. You know, a potboiler rewrite."
- On 23 January the group (now in Apple Studios) tried to record the song properly; bootleg recordings preserve a conversation between McCartney and Harrison between takes discussing the song, and McCartney explaining the original "protest song" concept. The recording captures the group deciding to drop the third verse largely because McCartney doesn't feel the verse is of high enough quality, although he likes the scanning of the word "Pakistani".
- In line with the concept behind the "Get Back project", the idea was to record all songs live to get back to the rock and roll sound of their early work. To achieve this the band recorded multiple takes in the studio trying to perfect the performance of each song.
- Billy Preston joined The Beatles on the Fender Rhodes electric piano from January 22, having been recruited by Harrison partly with a view to deter bickering among The Beatles. Harrison's idea worked: when Preston was present The Beatles avoided fighting as they had during some earlier sessions. Augmented by a fifth musician, the group started to produce some tighter performances.
- The Beatles recorded approximately ten takes on January 23 developing the song. On the January 27 they made a concerted effort to perfect "Get Back" by recording approximately 14 takes. By this time the song had the addition of a false ending and reprise coda, as heard on the bootlegs of the session which are widely available. After numerous takes the band jammed some old numbers and then returned to "Get Back" one last time in an attempt to record the master take. This performance (Take 11) was considered to be the best yet, it was musically tight and punchy without mistakes. For some reason though the song finishes without the restart; on the session tape George Harrison comments "we missed that end", this is the version heard on the Let It Be... Naked album.
- The next day, 28 January, the group attempted to recapture the previous day's performance and recorded several new takes each including the coda. Whilst these takes were good, they didn't quite achieve the quality of the best take from the previous day.
- The Beatles had EMI produce a mono remix of the track on 4 April (completed by Jeff Jarrett). When The Beatles heard it they were unhappy with the mix; therefore on 7 April McCartney and Glyn Johns booked time at Olympic Studios to produce new remixes for the single release. They made an edited version using the best take—take eleven—from January 27 and the 'best coda' ending from the January 28. The edit is so precise that it appears to be a continuous take, achieving the desired ending the Beatles had wanted all along. This was a divergence from the concept of straight live performance without studio trickery, but a relatively minor one, and avoids the somewhat abrupt ending of the version that is used on the Let It Be... Naked album.
- The Beatles performed "Get Back" (along with other songs from the album) as part of the "Beatles Rooftop Performance" which took place on the roof of Apple Studios in Savile Row, London on January 30, 1969. "Get Back" was performed in full three times; on the third and final time, The Beatles' performance was interrupted by the police, who had received complaints from office workers nearby. After the police spoke to Mal Evans, he turned off Lennon and Harrison's amplifiers only for Harrison to switch them back on, insisting that they finish the song. It was during this period that McCartney ad-libbed, "You've been playing on the roofs again, and that's no good, and you know your Mummy doesn't like that...she gets angry...she's gonna have you arrested! Get back!" None of the rooftop versions appear on record in their entirety although in the Let It Be film an edited version of the rooftop performance was included, and is available on Anthology 3.
- At the end of the last rooftop performance of "Get Back", the audience applauds and McCartney says "Thanks, Mo" in reply to Maureen Starkey's applause, and Lennon adds: "I'd like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves and I hope we've passed the audition". Spector used some of the talk preceding the master take of 27 January and edited on these comments to make the album version sound different from the single.
- Text Source: Get Back - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Sweet Loretta Martin thought she was a woman
But she was another man
All the girls around her say she's got it coming
But she gets it while she can" - Lyrics: The Beatles - Get Back Track - Yahoo! Music

- Covered:
- Elton John - 17-11-70 - 1970
- The Everly Brothers
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
Presents The Everly Brothers" in 1970 - Everly.net
- Complete discography and lyrics available
- The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Everly Brothers: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
- Grateful Dead
- Played once by the Grateful Dead on 28 January 1987 (not very successfully). Revived more recently by Phil Lesh & Friends.
- Text Source and Lyrics: Get Back - Grateful Dead | Official Site of the Grateful Dead: GratefulDead.com

- Grateful Dead Family Discography:Home: DeadDisc.com

- Grateful Dead | Official Site of the Grateful Dead: GratefulDead.com

- Grateful Dead: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- Covers listed below from Wikipedia:
- Amen Corner released their version as a single in November 1969, at around the time they disbanded.
- Patrick Williams, the US arranger and composer, did a jazz-oriented instrumental cover of the song for his 1970 album Heavy Vibrations. That version became the longtime theme for the TV quiz Sports Challenge, hosted by Dick Enberg.
- Soul singer Doris Troy with assistance from George Harrison, recorded the song as the b-side of her version of the folk song "Jacob's Ladder" on the Beatles' own Apple label.
- Elvis Presley performs the song as part of a medley with "Little Sister" in the rockumentary film That's the Way It Is (1970).
- Ike & Tina Turner covered it on their album Nutbush City Limits (1973).
- The Punkles did a Punk cover of this song on their "Pistol" album.
- Rod Stewart covered the song for the 1976 ephemeral music documentary All This and World War II. (Various Artists, 1976).
- Billy Preston, in the movie Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and released on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Various Artists, 1978).
- Shirley, Squirrely and Melvin, released on Shirley, Squirrely and Melvin (Excelsior 88009, 1981).
- Steve Wariner, in 1995
- Little Texas, in 2007
- Status Quo covered the song on their Don't Stop album in 1996.
- Al Green covered the song on his debut LP for Willie Mitchell's Hi Records in 1969.
- Chris Clark covered the song on her second and final album, "CC Rides Again", for the Motown distributed Weed Records.
- Nitty Gritty Dirt Band covered the song on their album Welcome to Woody Creek (2004).
- Jason Orange sings this in the Beatles Medley
- Amen Corner released their version as a single in November 1969, at around the time they disbanded.
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Get Back - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Loretta - "Get Back"
- Get Back - 1969
- Lucille
- "Lucille"
- Live at the BBC -
1963
- Covered - Originally Performed by Little Richard - 1957
- Lyrics: Little Richard - Lucille Track - Yahoo! Music
- Lucille (Little Richard song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Live at the BBC (The Beatles album) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- This songs has been covered thousands of times in recordings and in live concerts.
- Other Notable Covers:
- This songs has been covered thousands of times in recordings and in live concerts.
- AC/DC
- The Animals
- The Beatles
- Big Fat Snake - Big Fat Snake - 1991
- Bill Haley & His Comets
- Bugs Henderson and The Shuffle Kings - Four Tens Strike Again - 1996
- Cliff Richard - Cliff Richard Live! - 1976
- Crescent City Gold - The Ultimate Session - 1994
- Deep Purple - Made in Japan - 1972
- Don Rich - Come Back to Me - 2002
- The Everly Brothers
- A Date with The Everly Brothers - 1961
- A Date with The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Everly.net
- Complete discography and lyrics available
- The Everly Brothers - The Beehive: EverlyBrothers.com
- Fan Club
- The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Everly Brothers: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- A Date with The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- The Fireballs - Lucky 'leven - 1965
- The Flaming Sideburns - Close to Disaster - 1997
- The Flying Burrito Brothers
- The Hollies
- The Ian Gillan Band
- John Entwistle
- Johnny Hallyday - Les rocks les plus terribles - 1964
- Johnny Winter
- Little Bob Story - High Time - 1976
- Long Tall Ernie And The Shakers - Put On Your Rockin' Shoes With Long Tall Ernie And The Shakers - 1972
- Otis Redding - Pain in My Heart - 1964
- Paul McCartney - CHOBA B CCCP - 1988
- Peter & Gordon - Peter & Gordon - 1964
- Pink Fairies - Live at the Roundhouse 1975 - 1982
- Queen
- The Rockets
- The Shadows - Shades of Rock - 1970
- Status Quo - Don't Stop - 1996
- Van Halen
- The Ventures - Mashed Potatoes and Gravy - 1962
- Waylon Jennings
- Wings
- "Lucille"
- Live at the BBC -
1963
- Lucy
- "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Inspiration for the song came from a drawing by John Lennon's son, Julian. In which he called it "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds". The song was also a spark of controversy when released, including being banned by the BBC because of the supposed reference to the drug LSD, with the letters of the title spelling Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds. Lennon would later deny the reference during an interview with Rolling Stone
- Text Source: Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- Elton John - Single - 1974
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Madonna
- "Lady Madonna"
- Single - 1968
- Lyrics: Paul McCartney - Lady Madonna (Live) Track - Yahoo! Music

- Lady Madonna - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Lady Madonna - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Fat Domino - 1968
- The Everly Brothers
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
Presents The Everly Brothers" in 1970 - Everly.net
- Complete discography and lyrics available
- The Everly Brothers - The Beehive: EverlyBrothers.com
- Fan Club
- The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Everly Brothers: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
- Phoenix - Vremuri (Old times) - 1968
- The Punkles - Punk! - 2002
- The Nylons - Run For Cover - 1996
- Øystein Sunde
- Rajaton
- Earl Scruggs
- Covers during live shows
- EarlScruggs.com

- Lenny White featuring Chaka Khan - Streamline - 1977
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Lady Madonna - The Beatles
- Lyrics: Paul McCartney - Lady Madonna (Live) Track - Yahoo! Music
- Maggie Mae
- "Maggie Mae"
- Let It Be - 1970
- Traditional Song
- Maggie May (traditional song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Maggie Mae
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Maggie Mae
- "Maggie Mae"
- Let It Be - 1970
- Martha
- "Martha My Dear" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- The title "Martha My Dear" was inspired by McCartney's Old English Sheepdog, also named Martha. McCartney has said that the song itself is probably about McCartney's longtime love interest Jane Asher.
- Text Source: Martha My Dear - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Martha My Dear
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- "Martha My Dear" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Mary
- Mary - "Let It Be"
- Let It Be - 1970
- McCartney said he had the idea of "Let It Be" after a dream he had about his mother during the tense period surrounding the sessions for The Beatles (the "White Album"). McCartney explained that his mother—who died of cancer when McCartney was fourteen—was the inspiration for the "Mother Mary" lyric.
- Text Source: Let It Be (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Let It Be - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Mary - "Let It Be"
- Let It Be - 1970
- Mary Jane
- "What's the New Mary Jane" - Anthology 3 - 1996
- Michelle
- "Michelle"
- Rubber Soul - 1965
- Michelle (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Michelle - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Michelle (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- "Michelle"
- Rubber Soul - 1965
- Molly
- Molly - "Obladi, Oblada"
by The Beatles - The Beatles - 1968
- "Desmond had a barrow in the market place
Molly is the singer in a band
Desmond says to Molly, girl I like your face
And Molly says this as she takes him by the hand" - Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- The Everly Brothers
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
Presents The Everly Brothers" in 1970 - Everly.net
- Complete discography and lyrics available
- The Everly Brothers - The Beehive: EverlyBrothers.com
- Fan Club
- The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Everly Brothers: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- The Everly Brothers
- "Desmond had a barrow in the market place
- Molly - "Obladi, Oblada"
by The Beatles - The Beatles - 1968
- Nancy
- Nancy - "Rocky Raccoon"
- Rocky Raccoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- List available at Wikipedia Link
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Rocky Raccoon
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Rocky Raccoon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Nancy - "Rocky Raccoon"
- Pam
- "Polythene Pam"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- The name 'Polythene Pam' came from the nickname of an early Beatles' fan from the Cavern Club days, named Pat Hodgett (now Dawson), who would often eat polythene. She became known as 'Polythene Pat'. She said in an interview, "I used to eat polythene all the time. I'd tie it in knots and then eat it. Sometimes I even used to burn it and then eat it when it got cold."
- Text Source: Polythene Pam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Polythene Pam
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Polythene Pam
- "Polythene Pam"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Prudence
- "Dear Prudence" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- The song is about actress Mia Farrow's sister, Prudence, who was present when the Beatles visited Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in India. Prudence, focused on meditation, stayed in her room for the majority of their stay. Lennon, who was worried that she was depressed, wrote this song for her, inviting her to "come out to play".
- Text Source: Dear Prudence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Dear Prudence
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Carbon Leaf
- The Five Stairsteps - B-side of Oooh Child - 1970
- Jerry Garcia Band - Jerry Garcia Band - 1991
- Gov't Mule
- Graham Central Station - The Jam: The Larry Graham & Graham Central Station Anthology - 2001
- Ramsey Lewis - Mother Nature's Son - 1968
- Brad Mehldau - Largo - 2002
- Alanis Morissette
- Our Lady Peace
- Doug Parkinson - 1973
- Jaco Pastorius - Live in New York City - volume two
- Phish
- Kenny Rankin - Family - 1970
- Raq
- Siouxsie & the Banshees - Hyæna - 1983
- Umphrey's McGee
- Leslie West - The Leslie West Band - 1976
- Yonder Mountain String Band
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Dear Prudence
- "Dear Prudence" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Rita
- "Lovely Rita"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- The song emanates from when McCartney was issued with a parking ticket outside Abbey Road Studios, by a female traffic warden named Meta Davis. Instead of becoming angry, he accepted it with good grace and expressed his feelings (sarcastically) in song. When asked why he had called her "Rita", McCartney replied: "Well, she looked like a Rita to me".
- Text Source: Lovely Rita - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Lovely Rita
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Les Fradkin - Pepper Front To Backhas - 2007
- Travis - 2007
- Roy Wood - 1976
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Lovely Rita
- "Lovely Rita"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Rose
- Rose - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- Steve Martin does a cover of this song in the movie "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" in 1978
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Maxwell's Silver Hammer
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Rose - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Rosemary
- Rosemary - "Give Peace A Chance" by John Lennon - Single - 1969
- "Give Peace a Chance" is a song written by John Lennon and originally credited to Lennon/McCartney (John Lennon and Paul McCartney). However, when Lennon's posthumous live album with Elephant's Memory, Live in New York City (recorded in 1972), was reissued in the 1990s, "Give Peace a Chance" was credited solely to Lennon. End credits of the 2006 documentary The U.S. vs. John Lennon (in which the song appears) and its appearance on the 1997 compilation album Lennon Legend: The Very Best of John Lennon (and its DVD version six years later) also list Lennon as the sole writer of this song. On the topic of co-writing credits Lennon later stated his regrets about “[being] guilty enough to give McCartney credit as co-writer on my first independent single instead of giving it to Yoko, who had actually written it with me.”
- A different song named "Give Peace a Chance", written by Leon Russell and Bonny Bramlett, was sung by Joe Cocker.
- Early in the Bed-In, a reporter asked John what he was trying to do. John said, "All we are saying is give peace a chance," spontaneously, but he liked the phrase and set it to music for the song. He sang the song several times during the Bed-In, and finally, on 1 June 1969, recorded it using a simple setup of four microphones and a four-track Ampex tape recorder rented from RCA Victor in Montreal.
- It was recorded by John Lennon and issued as a single under the name Plastic Ono Band. To maximize media exposure, newlyweds John Lennon and Yoko Ono originally intended to host their second "Bed-In" event in New York City (the first was held in Amsterdam), but U.S. immigration officials refused to allow Lennon in the country because of his November 1968 drug conviction in London. The couple instead chose Montreal because it was close to the U.S. border. The song was recorded on 1 June 1969 in Room 1742 at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, Canada. The recording session was attended by dozens of journalists and various celebrities, including Timothy Leary, Joseph Schwartz, Allan Rock, Rosemary Woodruff Leary, Petula Clark, Dick Gregory, Allen Ginsberg, Murray the K, Al Capp and Derek Taylor, many of whom are mentioned in the lyrics. Lennon played acoustic guitar and was joined by Tommy Smothers of the Smothers Brothers, also on acoustic guitar.
- The "Give Peace a Chance" single (with Yoko Ono's "Remember Love" as the B-side) was released on 45 RPM vinyl in the UK on July 4, 1969 and July 7, 1969 in the U.S. The track's first full-length album appearance was on the Lennon hits compilation The John Lennon Collection issued November 1, 1982 in the UK (EMI/Parlophone Records) and November 8, 1982 (originally on Geffen Records, since re-released on Capitol Records). A significantly truncated version of the Montreal session and a snippet of the One to One Benefit concert performance of the song appear on Lennon's Shaved Fish hits compilation from 1975.
- "Give Peace a Chance" was the first "solo" single released by a member of the Beatles while the band was still intact, though, technically, the artist was credited as Plastic Ono Band, not John Lennon. It reached number 14 on the pop charts in the United States and was kept out of the top slot in the UK by The Rolling Stones' "Honky Tonk Women".
- The song quickly became the anthem of the anti-war movement, and was sung by as many as half a million demonstrators in Washington, D.C. at the Vietnam Moratorium Day, on 15 October 1969. They were led by the renowned folk singer Pete Seeger, who interspersed phrases like, "Are you listening, Nixon?" and "Are you listening, Agnew?", between the choruses of protesters singing, "All we are saying ... is give peace a chance".
- The original last verse of the song refers to: "John and Yoko, Timmy Leary, Rosemary, Tommy Smothers, Bobby Dylan, Tommy Cooper, Derek Taylor, Norman Mailer, Allen Ginsberg, Hare Krishna".
- In the performance of "Give Peace a Chance" included on the Live Peace in Toronto 1969 album, Lennon openly stated that he couldn't remember all of the words and improvised with the names of the band members sharing the stage with him and anything that came to mind: "John and Yoko, Eric Clapton, Klaus Voormann, Penny Lane, Roosevelt, Nixon, Tommy Jones and Tommy Cooper, and somebody."
- The third verse contains a reference to masturbation, but Lennon changed this to "mastication" on the official lyric sheet. He later admitted this was a "cop out" but wanted to avoid unnecessary controversy.
- Text Source: Give Peace a Chance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Ev'rybody's talkin' 'bout
John and (NAME OMITTED, SHE BROKE UP THE BAND), Timmy Leary, Rosemary,
Tommy Smothers, Bobby Dylan, Tommy Cooper,
Derek Taylor, Norman Mailer, Alan Ginsberg, Hare Krishna
Hare Hare Krishna
All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance"- This is Timothy Leary's wife
- Covered:
- This song has been covered many, many times.
- Elton John
- B Side Single - 1988
- This version has different lyrics, that mention several female names. You can view them here
- Lyrics: Elton John - Give Peace A Chance Track - Yahoo! Music

- Elton John - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Elton John: Home: Welcome to eltonjohn.com - Elton John's Official Web Site

- Elton John: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- Rosemary - "Give Peace A Chance" by John Lennon - Single - 1969
- Sadie
- "Sexy Sadie"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Sexy Sadie (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Sexy Sadie
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Sexy Sadie
- Sexy Sadie (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- "Sexy Sadie"
- The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Sally
- "Long Tall Sally" - Long Tall Sally EP - 1964
- Covered: Originally performed by Little Richard - 1956
- Lyrics and Composition: Robert Blackwell, Enotris Johnson, Richard Penniman (AKA - Little Richard)
- Long Tall Sally - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Long Tall Sally (EP) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Other Covers:
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Long Tall Sally
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Long Tall Sally
- "Long Tall Sally" - Long Tall Sally EP - 1964
- Suzy
- "Suzy Parker"
- Let It Be (Film) - 1970
- I do not believe this song was released on an album
- Let It Be (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Suzy Parker"
- Let It Be (Film) - 1970
- Valerie
- Valerie - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- Covered:
- Steve Martin does a cover of this song in the movie "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" in 1978
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: Maxwell's Silver Hammer - The Beatles
- This a spectacular site that collects covers of songs
- Maxwell's Silver Hammer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Valerie - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer"
- Abbey Road - 1969
- Vera
- Vera - "When I’m Sixty-Four"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- When I'm Sixty-Four - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com
- Covered:
- The Everly Brothers
- Performed on the television show “Johnny Cash Presents The Everly Brothers" in 1970. Phil Everly duet with Merrilee Rush.
- Everly.net
- Complete discography and lyrics available
- The Everly Brothers - The Beehive: EverlyBrothers.com
- Fan Club
- The Everly Brothers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- The Everly Brothers: Discography - Complete songs about Girls, Women and Ladies
- SecondHandSongs.com - Song: When I'm Sixty-Four - The Beatles

- The Everly Brothers
- Vera - "When I’m Sixty-Four"
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- The name that should be here is ommited because she broke up the band and must be evil
- Not Really About Girls
- "Hey Jude"
- 1968
- The song's original title was "Hey Jules", and it was intended to comfort Julian Lennon from the stress of his parents' divorce. McCartney said, "I started with the idea 'Hey Jules', which was Julian, don't make it bad, take a sad song and make it better. Hey, try and deal with this terrible thing. I knew it was not going to be easy for him. I always feel sorry for kids in divorces ... I had the idea [for the song] by the time I got there. I changed it to 'Jude' because I thought that sounded a bit better." Julian Lennon discovered the song had been written for him almost twenty years later. He remembered being closer to McCartney than to his father: "Paul and I used to hang about quite a bit—more than Dad and I did. We had a great friendship going and there seems to be far more pictures of me and Paul playing together at that age than there are pictures of me and my dad."
- Text Source: Hey Jude - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Penny Lane"
- Magical Mystery Tour -
1967
- The song's title is derived from the name of a street in the band's hometown, Liverpool. The area that surrounds its junction with Smithdown Road is also commonly called Penny Lane. Locally the term "Penny Lane" was the name given to Allerton Road and Smithdown Road and its busy shopping area. Penny Lane is named after James Penny, an 18th century slave trader.
- Penny Lane - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Wikipedia.com

- "Hey Jude"
- 1968
Anna, Bonnie, Carol, Clarabella, Eleanor, Joan, Jude, Julia, Lil, Lizzy, Loretta, Lucille, Lucy, Madonna, Maggie Mae, Martha, Mary, Mary Jane, Michelle, Molly, Nancy, Pam, Penny, Prudence, Rita, Rose, Sadie, Sally, Suzy, Valerie, Vera
- "Anna (Go To Him)" - Please Please Me - 1963
- "My Bonnie" - 1962
- "Carol" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Clarabella" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Eleanor Rigby" - Revolver - 1968
- Joan - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- "Julia" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1938
- Lil - "Rocky Raccoon" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" - Help! - 1965
- Loretta - "Get Back" - Single - 1969
- "Lucille" - Live at the BBC - 1963
- "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- "Lady Madonna" - Single - 1968
- "Maggie Mae" - Let It Be - 1970
- "Martha My Dear" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- Mary - "Let It Be" - Let It Be - 1970
- "What's the New Mary Jane" - Anthology 3 - 1996
- "Michelle" - Rubber Soul - 1965
- Molly - "Obladi, Oblada" - The Beatles - 1968
- Nancy - "Rocky Raccoon"
- "Polythene Pam" - Abbey Road - 1969
- "Dear Prudence" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Lovely Rita" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Rose - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- "Sexy Sadie" - The Beatles (White Album) - 1968
- "Long Tall Sally" - Long Tall Sally EP - 1964
- "Suzy Parker" - Let It Be (Film) - 1970
- Valerie - "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" - Abbey Road - 1969
- Vera - "When I’m Sixty-Four" - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - 1967
- Not About Girls
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
-
Abby, Abell, Abigail, Ada, Adalia, Adalida, Adaliene, Addie, Adelaide, Adeline, Adia, Adina, Adrian, Adriana, Adrienne, Afeni, Agnes, Aida, Aisha, Aja, Akasha, Alayna, Alberta, Alda Salas, Alessandra, Alexa, Alexis, Ali, Alice, Alicia, Alidina, Alison, Allison, Alma, Alma Rose, Almaz, Althea, Alyda, Alyssa, Amanda, Amapola, Amaranta, Amaranth, Amber, Amelia, Amelie, Amie, Amity, Amoreena, Amy, Ana, Anabel, Anastasia, Andi, Andrea, Andromeda, Angel, Angela, Angelene, Angelia, Angelina, Angeline, Angelique, Angelica, Angellica, Angi, Angie, Anita, Anitra, Anji, Ann, Ann Marie, Anna, Anna Lee, Anna Marie, Anna Molly, Annabel, Annabella, Annabelle, Annabelle Lee, Anne, Anne Marie, Annette, Annie, Annie Laurie, Annie Marie, Anny, Antoinette, Antonia, Anya, April, April Anne, Arabella, Aretha, Arianne, Ariel, Arienette, Arizona, Arlene, Ashley, Asia, Athena, Aubrey, Audrey, Aura, Aurora, Autumn, Ava
-
Babs, Bambi, Barbara, Barbara Allen, Barbara Ann, Barbara Lee, Barbarella, Barbie, Bathsheba, Bea, Beatrice, Beatrix, Bebe, Becky, Bee, Beka, Belinda, Bella, Bella Donna, Bella Linda, Belladonna, Belle, Benita, Bennie, Bernadette, Bernadine, Bernice, Bertha, Bertha Lou, Bess, Bessie, Bessy, Beth, Betsy, Bette, Betti, Bettie, Betty, Betty Jean, Betty Lou, Betty Louise, Betty Sue, Beverly, Beverly Jean, Billie, Billie Jean, Billie Lee, Boadicea, Bobbi, Bobbie, Bobbie Ann, Bobbie Jo, Bobbie Sue, Bobby, Bobby Jean, Bobby Sue, Bonnie, Bonnie Jean, Bonnie Lou, Bonny Lee, Bony, Brandi, Brandy, Bree, Bren, Brenda, Brennan, Bridget, Brighid, Brigitte, Britney, Brittany, Brittney, Brooke
-
Cailin, Caldonia, Calliope, Calypso, Camelia, Camille, Candi, Candida, Candy, Caprice, Carla, Carlene, Carli, Carlita, Carlotta, Carly, Carmela, Carmelia, Carmelita, Carmella, Carmen, Carol, Carol Jane, Carol Lynn, Carolee, Carolene, Carolina, Caroline, Carolyn, Carolyna, Carrie, Carrie-Ann, Casey, Cass, Cassandra, Cassidy, Cassie, Cassiopeia, Caterina, Catherine, Cathy, Catrin, Cavi, Cecilia, Cecilia Ann, Celena, Celeste, Celia, Chandra, Chanel, Chante, Charity, Charlena, Charlene, Charlie, Charlotte, Charlotte Ann, Charmaine, Chasey, Chastity, Chelsea, Cher, Cheri, Cherie, Cherise, Cherri, Cherry, Cheryl, China, Chloe, Christalena, Christeen, Christi, Christie, Christie Lee, Christina, Christine, Christy, Cicciolina, Cicely, Cinderella, Cindy, Cinnamon, C.J., Clair, Claire, Clara, Clarabella, Clare, Clarissa, Claudette, Claudia, Claudie, Clementine, Cleo, Cleopatra, Clorette, Clorinda, Coco, Codene, Colleen, Collette, Collrane, Conchita, Condi, Connie, Consuelo, Contine, Cookies, Cora, Cora Lee, Corretta, Corrina, Courtney, Crissy, Cruella, Crysta, Crystal, Cvalda, Cybele, Cynthia, Cynthia Margaret
-
Daisy, Daisy Bell, Daisy Jane, Daisy Mae, Daisy May, Dajana, Damita Jo, Dana, Dandelion, Dani, Danielle, Daphne, Darcy, Daria, Darlene, Daronda, Dawn, Dawna, DeDe, Deanie, Deanna, Debbie, Debbie Denise, Debbie Rae, Debby, Debora, Deborah, Debra, Debra Sue, Dee, Dee Dee, Deidre, Delaney, Delia, Delilah, Della, Delores, Delorla, Denise, Desdemona, Deseree, Deserie, Desire, Dia, Diamond, Diana, Diane, Didi, Dinah, Dinah Flo, Dolly, Dolores, Dominique, Domino, Donna, Donna Lee, Dora, Doralice, Doreen, Dorina, Doris, Dorothy, Dory, Dottie, Dusty
-
Eartha, Echo, Edie, Edina, Edith, Edna, Edweena, Effie, Eileen, Elaine, Elayne, Eleanor, Elenor, Elisa, Elise, Eliza, Elizabeth, Ella, Ella Mae, Elle, Ellen, Elly May, Elmira, Eloise, Elsa, Elsie, Elva, Elvira, Emalina, Emaline, Emily, Emm, Emma, Emma Jean, Emma Rose, Emmalene, Emmaline, Emmaretta, Emmie, Emmylou, Enid, Enola, Erica, Ericka, Erika, Erin, Ernestine, Eryn, Esmeralda, Estella, Estelle, Ester, Esther, Ethel, Eva, Eva Marie, Evalia, Evaline, Evangaline, Evangeline, Eve, Eveline, Evelyn, Evie, Ezmerelda
-
Faith, Fancy, Fannie, Fannie Mae, Fanny, Fatima, Feleena, Felicia, Felina, Fifi, Fiona, Flo, Flora, Florence, Frances, Francesca, Francine, Frankie, Frida, Froney
-
Gabby, Gabrielle, Gail, Galadriel, Gayatri, Gayle, Genevieve, Georgette, Georgia, Georgia Lee, Georgia Rae, Georgianna, Georgie, Geraldine, Gertie Ruth, Gertrude, Giada, Gidget, Gigi, Gina, Ginger, Ginnie, Ginny, Gladys, Glendora, Gloria, Goldie, Grace, Gracie, Gretchen, Griselda, Grizelda, Guinevere, Gwen, Gwendolyn, Gwendolyn Wanda
-
Hailie, Haley, Haligh, Halley, Hally Lou, Hana, Hanin, Hanna, Hannah, Hannah Jane, Harmony, Harriet, Hattie, Haushinka, Hayley, Hazel, Heather, Heidi, Helen, Helena, Helga, Heloise, Henrietta, Higinia, Hildegarde, Hillary, Holly, Holly Ann, Holyanna, Honey
-
Ida, Ida Jane, Ida Mae, Imelda, Imogene, Inanna, Ines, Ingrid, Iola, Irene, Iris, Irma, Isabel, Isabella, Isabelle, Isis, Isobel, Ivy, Ivy Jean, Izabella
-
Jack-A-Lynn, Jackie, Jacklyn, Jacksie, Jacqueline, Jacquie, Jainie, Jainy, Jamaica, Jamie, Jan, Jane, Janeane, Janelle, Janet, Janet May, Janey, Janice, Janie, Janine, Janis, Jannie, Janny Lou, Jasey Rae, Jasmine, Jayne, Jean, Jean-Louis, Jean-Marie, Jeanette, Jeanie, Jeannie, Jeannine, Jeanny, Jemima, Jen, Jenifa, Jenni, Jennie, Jennie Lee, Jennifer, Jenny, Jenny Fey, Jenny Lee, Jenny Rebbeca, Jerri Lynn, Jesamine, Jessi, Jessica, Jessie, Jessye, Jezebel, Jill, Jillian, Jo, Jo-Ann, Jo Ann, JoJo, Joan, Joanessa, Joanie, Joanna, Joanne, Jodi, Jodie, Jody, Johanna, Johnny, Jolee, Jolene, Joni, Jools, Jordanna, Josaphina, Josephine, Josie, Joy, Juanita, Juby, Jude, Judith, Judy, Judy Mae, Julia, Juliana, Julianne, Julie, Julienne, Juliet, Juliette, June, Juno, Jura, Justine
-
Kahlia, Kalen, Kamala, Kara, Kara Jane, Karen, Kari, Karina, Kashka, Kate, Katerine, Katey, Katharine, Katherine, Kathleen, Kathy, Katie, Katie Mae, Katrina, Katy, Kay, Kayleigh, Keiko, Keisha, Kelly, Kelly Jean, Kerry Anne, Kesley, Kia, Kiki, Kim, Kimberly, Kisha, Kirstyn, Kitty, Krista, Kristen, Kristina, Kristy, Krystal, Kylie, Kyrie
-
Lacey, Lady, LaKia, Lalena, Lana, Lara, Lashaun, Lashonda, Latasha, Laticia, LaTisha, LaToya, Laura, Laura Jean, Laura Mae, Lauren, Laurie, Lauryn, Laverne, Lavinia, Layla, Lea, Lea Ann, Leah, Leanne, Leela, Leila, Leilani, Lena, Lenora, Lenore, Leona, LeShaun, Lesley Ann, Leslie, Leslie Anne, Leyna, Libbie, Liezah, Lil, Lila, Lilah, Lilian, Lili Marleen, Lilith, Lillie, Lilly, Lily, Lily Ann, Lily Belle, Lily Marlene, Lin, Linda, Linda Lou, Linda Lu, Lindsay, Lisa, Lisette, Liviana, Liza, Liza Jane, Lizzie, Lizzy, Lois, Lola, Lolita, Lorelei, Loreley, Lorena, Lorene, Lorenza, Loretta, Lori, Lorilie, Lorraine, Lorrie, Louisa, Louise, Lovey, Lu, Luann, Luanne, Luci, Lucille, Lucinda, Lucretia, Lucy, Ludella, Luisa, Luka, Lula, Lulla Bell, Lulu, Luna, Lupe Lu, Lyanna, Lydia, Lyla, Lynda, Lyn, Lynette, Lynn
-
Mab, Mabel, Mable, Macarena, Madalaine, Madalena, Madeleine, Madeline, Madge, Madison, Madonna, Magda, Magdalena, Magdalene, Magdelene, Maggie, Maggie Mae, Maggie Mae, Mahalia, Mahila, Maime, Malinda, Mame, Mandy, Mara, Marcella, Marcia, Maree, Margaret, Margaret Ann, Margaret Anne, Margarita, Marge, Margery, Margie, Margo, Margory, Marguerite, Maria, Mariah, Mariam, Marian, Mariana, Marianna, Marianne, Marie, Marie-Jeanne, Marie Cherie, Marie Christine, Marie Marie, Mariella, Marilee, Marilyn, Marina, Marion, Marjorine, Marlena, Marlene, Marsha, Marta, Martha, Martha Lorraine, Martika, Marvalene, Mary, Mary Alice, Mary Ann, Mary Anne, Mary Beth, Mary Ellen, Mary Jane, Mary Jo, Mary Lee, Mary Lou, Mary Margaret, Maryann, Maryanne, Marylou, Matilida, Mattie, Maude, Maureen, Mavis, Maxine, May, May Alice, May Jane, Maya, Maybelle, Maybellene, Maydell, Mazey, Meagan, Medusa, Meg, Megan, Melanie, Melinda, Melissa, Mellie, Melody, Mercedes, Merilee, Mesuline, Mia, Mica, Michelle, Mildred, Millie, Milly, Mimi, Mina, Minnie, Mira, Miranda, Miriam, Missa, Missy, Misty, Mitzi, Molina, Molly, Mona, Mona Lisa, Monica, Monique, Mony, Morgan, Morgana, Morticia, Muriel, Myla, Myrna
-
Nadia, Nadine, Naima, Nan, Nanci, Nancy, Nancy Ann, Nancy Lee, Nanette, Naomi, Natale, Natalia, Natalie, Natasha, Natassia, Nefertiti, Nellie, Nelly, Nettie, Nicki, Nicole, Nicolette, Niki, Nikita, Nikki, Nina, Nona, Nora, Nora Lee, Norah, Norma, Norma Jean
-
Paige, Pam, Pamela, Pandora, Paris, Pat, Patricia, Patsy, Patti, Patti Ann, Patty, Paula, Paulene, Paulina, Pauline, Pearl, Pearly, Peg, Peggy, Peggy Ann, Peggy Lee, Peggy Sue, Pele, Penelope, Penny, Perelandra, Persephone, Petula, Petunia, Phaedra, Phillipa, Philomena, Phoebe, Phyllis, Pinky, Pippi, Pocahonatas, Polly, Pollyann, Pollyanna, Pollyanne, Porcelina, Portia, Prescilla, Priscilla, Prudence
-
Rachael, Rachael Anne, Rachel, Ramona, Rapunzel, Raquel, Rasheeda, Ray, Reba, Rebecca, Rebecca Lynn, Rebekah, Regina, Regine, Reila, Rena, Rene, Renee, Reno, Rhiannon, Rhoda, Rhody, Rhonda, Ricky, Rikki, Rio, Rita, Rita May, Roberta, Robin, Robyn, Rohna, Rolene, Ronda, Ronnie, Rosa, Rosa Lee, Rosalee, Rosalie, Rosalinda, Rosaline, Rosalita, Rosalyn, Rosalyn, Rosanna, Rose, Roseanne, Rose-Marie, Rose Mary, Rosealia, Roseanne, Rosemarie, Rosemary, Rosetta, Rosey, Roshumba, Rosie, Rowena, Roxanne, Roxette, Ruby, Ruby Ann, Ruby Claire, Ruby Jean, Ruby Lee, Ruth, Ruth Ann, Ruthie, Ruthy
-
Sabrina, Sacha, Sadie, Sadie Mae, Safronia, Sakeena, Sal, Salina, Sallie, Sally, Sally Ann, Sally Jo, Sally Lee, Sally Mae, Sally Rose, Salome, Samantha, Sammy, Sandie, Sandra, Sandra Dee, Sandy, Sara, Sara Lee, Sarah, Sarah Beth, Sarah Jane, Sasha, Sashiko, Satie, Savannah, Scarlet, Seattle, Secora, Selena, Selma, Serena, Shameka, Shandi, Shandy, Shania, Shaniqua, Shannon, Sharada, Shari, Shari Ann, Sharise, Sharleena, Sharmon, Sharon, Sharona, Sha'von, Shayla, Shayna, Sheena, Sheila, Shekhina, Sherleena, Sherrie, Sherry, Shilo, Shiralee, Shirley, Shirley Jean, Shonda, Sierra, Simone, Sissy, Sloopy, Smokey, Sofia, Sonia, Sonja, Sophia, Sophie, Stacey, Stacie Anne, Stacy, Starla, Stella, Stephanie, Stevie, Stormy, Sue, Sugaree, Sukie, Sunny, Susan, Susanna, Susannah, Susanne, Susie, Sussudio, Suzanna, Suzanne, Suze, Suzen, Suzetta, Suzi, Suzie, Suzy, Suzy Lee, Suzzette, Sybil, Sylvia, Sylvie
-
Tallulah, Talula, Tamara, Tammy, Tammy Rae, Tangerine, Tania, Tanya, Tara, Tawana, Taylor, Tenesha, Tenille, Teresa, Teresa Lynn, Tereza, Terri, Terry, Tess, Tessie, Thelma, Theresa, Thumbalina, Tiffany, Tillie, Tina, Tisha, Toni, Tonya, Tootie, Tootsie, Tracey, Tracie, Tracy, Tricia, Trina, Trishalana, Tristessa, Tronya, Trudi, Trudy
-
Valencia, Valentina, Valerie, Valie, Valleri, Vampira, Vanessa, Vanna, Veida, Vendella, Venus, Vera, Verla, Veronica, Vicki, Vickie, Vicky, Victoria, Vida, Vidalia, Viola Lee, Violet, Virgina, Vivian, Vivica, Vivienne
-
Wanda, Wanomi, Weezie, Wendela, Wendy, Whitney, Willhelmina, Wilma, Winona, Wynona
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
Feel free to use anything found on this page as you see fit. Trivial knowledge should always be free and available to all. My only request is that you link to this site or cite the references listed.~The Mayor of Kentonville