A spelling variant of Leslie, from a Scottish place name meaning garden of holly.
Lesli is a streamlined spelling of Leslie, a name that began not as a personal name at all but as a Scottish clan surname and place name. The Scottish toponym is generally traced to a wooded hollow in Aberdeenshire, with Gaelic roots suggesting meanings along the lines of "garden of hollies" or "grey fortress." The Norman-descended Leslie family became one of Scotland's most prominent noble houses, and like many aristocratic surnames, the name gradually migrated into first-name usage across the English-speaking world.
Through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Leslie flourished as a given name on both sides of the Atlantic, worn by figures as varied as the charismatic British actor Leslie Howard, lost aboard a wartime flight in 1943, and the Canadian comedian Leslie Nielsen, whose deadpan genius spanned six decades. Lesli and other phonetic variants—Lesley, Lesly—emerged as the name grew increasingly popular for girls, a gentle orthographic signal of gender in a name that had long been shared. The double-e Lesley became the preferred feminine spelling in Britain, while single-l and single-e combinations like Lesli carried a quietly individualist feel.
Today, Lesli occupies a pleasantly vintage register—familiar enough to feel grounded, yet rare enough to stand apart in a classroom. Its lack of a fixed cultural mythology allows it to sit lightly on its wearer, suggesting a kind of effortless, understated confidence. Parents choosing Lesli often prize its simplicity and its subtle Scottish heritage, a name that feels both classical and quietly modern.