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Pollyanna

Combination of Polly and Anna, popularized by Eleanor Porter's 1913 novel about an optimistic girl.

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1900s1950s1990s
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Name story

Pollyanna is one of the rare names that has crossed from given name into common vocabulary — to call someone a Pollyanna is to accuse them of incurable, perhaps irrational optimism. The name was created by American author Eleanor H. Porter for her 1913 novel *Pollyanna*, in which an orphaned girl named Pollyanna Whittier arrives in a stern New England town and transforms everyone around her through her relentless practice of the *Glad Game*: finding something to be grateful for in every circumstance, no matter how grim.

The novel was an enormous bestseller, spawning a sequel and multiple film adaptations, most famously the 1960 Disney film starring Hayley Mills. The name itself is a compound of Polly and Anna — Polly being an old English pet form of Mary (via Molly → Polly), and Anna the Latinate form of the Hebrew *Hannah*, meaning grace or favor. So beneath the literary associations lies a name built from two of the most beloved feminine names in the Western tradition, both carrying connotations of grace, warmth, and devotion.

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Polly was a common, affectionate name in its own right, and Pollyanna simply amplified its sweetness. The cultural trajectory of Pollyanna is fascinating: it began as an entirely earnest celebration of joy and optimism, became a mild pejorative for naivety by mid-century, and has since been partially reclaimed by scholars and psychologists who point out that what the character actually modeled — cognitive reframing, gratitude practice, resilience — is now recognized as genuinely effective mental health strategy. The name today is chosen by parents who want to lean into that original, unironic warmth.

Names like Pollyanna

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