• I’m here to say Jasmine /Jazmín in English and Spanish, because I haven’t seen it mentioned yet

        • “Why do they have rights over the Netherlands anyways? They got troops in the Netherlands a few hundreds of years ago, but we have troops over there too!”

  • Very common in Brazil: Rosa, Margarida, Jasmim/Yasmin, Lívia, Íris.

    ps: Margarida is Daisy and Lívia is Lily.

  • Portuguese: Rosa, Margarida (Daisy), Floribela (“beautiful flower”), Dália (Dhalia), Íris, Violeta, Jasmim, Magnólia, Flor (literally “flower”), Gardénia, Hortência (Hydrangea), Florência, Liliana (from Lily), Jacinta (Hyacinth). I know personally women with all but four of these names.

    This in Portuguese, where I currently live, but I have no reason to believe you won’t find them in Brazil or other Portuguese speaking countries as well…

  • I’m sure someone else will cover the big ones for the US but I just want to chime in that my son’s classmate is named Cattleya. (It’s a type of orchid.)

  • What I can think of in German: Rose, Erika, Jasmin, Iris (maybe Viola but that’s not really the commonly used name for the flower)

  • In France some common ones are Rose, Iris, Capucine (Nasturtium), Hortense (Hydrangea), Marguerite (Daisy), Violette, Azalée (Azalea), Camélia, Fleur (Flower), Lilas (Lilac). There’s way more than that but those are the ones that come to mind.

  • Also in English, there’s Rosa, Marigold, and Iris (though Marigold might be a color rather than a flower?)

  • In German, we have Margaret(e) - translates to daisy We have Rose and some variations of it (Anne-Rose, Rosa, Rosalinde…)

  • Here a few in Finnish:

    • Kanerva (heather)
    • Kielo (lily)
    • Vuokko (anemone)
    • Ruusu (rose)
    • Kukka (flower)
    • Lemmikki (forget-me-not)
    • Orvokki (violet)
    • Vanamo (Linnaea borealis)