From Spanish Sol or Soledad traditions, associated with the sun or with sacred solitude.
Sole is the Italian word for sun, and as a given name it carries all the warmth, centrality, and life-giving radiance that the image implies. In Italian naming tradition, Sole is used primarily for girls and belongs to a family of luminous nature names — alongside Luna (moon), Aurora (dawn), and Stella (star) — that give children their place in the celestial order. The name is particular to the Italian peninsula and particularly to southern Italy, where the Mediterranean sun is not a metaphor but a physical presence that shapes daily life, architecture, and emotional temperament.
In Spain and Latin America, Sole functions as a hypocorism — a pet name — for Soledad, a name of an entirely different meaning and origin. Soledad comes from the Spanish word for solitude or loneliness and is a Marian name honoring Nuestra Señora de la Soledad, Our Lady of Solitude, a title of the Virgin Mary venerating her grief and aloneness after the crucifixion. This gives Sole a fascinating double life: in Italy it is radiant and warm; in the Spanish-speaking world it carries a note of profound, holy sorrow.
Both are beautiful, and both are serious. In recent years Sole has attracted attention among parents in English-speaking countries drawn to short, elemental names that travel easily across languages. Its one-syllable elegance (in Italian pronunciation, roughly "SOH-lay") and its instantly understood solar symbolism make it feel both ancient and freshly modern. A child named Sole brings a little sunlight into every introduction — which is, when you consider it, a generous thing to give someone at birth.