A modern English-style compound blending Wren, the small songbird, with the popular -lie/-lee ending.
Wrenlie is a modern compound name that layers the bird name Wren onto the warm, Irish-inflected suffix -lie (echoing names like Callie, Ellie, and Hollie). The wren itself has a remarkable cultural footprint far exceeding its tiny physical size: in Celtic folklore, the wren was paradoxically called the "king of birds," a title earned in a fable where the wren outsmarted the eagle by hiding in its feathers and flying just a fraction higher once the eagle had exhausted itself. The story made the wren a symbol of clever resourcefulness and unlikely triumph.
In Irish and British tradition, the wren was associated with ancient druidic knowledge and was historically featured in the mid-winter Wren Day celebrations on St. Stephen's Day. In poetry, the wren appears in Shakespeare, in Keats, and most memorably in William Blake, who wrote that "a robin redbreast in a cage / puts all heaven in a rage" — a sentiment extended, in the folk imagination, to the wren.
The name Wren alone has climbed steadily in American naming charts since the 2010s, carried partly by a character in the television series Pretty Little Liars. Wrenlie takes that momentum and renders it softer and more melodic — the -lie ending gives it a diminutive sweetness, as though the wren itself were being addressed affectionately. It is a name for a child imagined as quick-witted, spirited, and impossible to underestimate — the bird that outflew the eagle, reimagined as a name.