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10 dog names that make puppies sound extra adorable (and somehow even cuter in real life)

Naming a puppy is one of those things that feels simple until you're actually doing it
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Naming a puppy is one of those things that feels simple until you're actually doing it


You've got a tiny, chaotic, impossibly soft creature in your lap and suddenly every name you thought you liked sounds either too serious or too silly or just... wrong. The name needs to fit. It needs to roll off the tongue at the park when you're calling them back from eating something they shouldn't. And honestly, it needs to sound a little bit adorable, because that's just what puppies deserve.

These ten names have been doing the rounds for a reason. They're the ones that make people at the vet go "oh, that's perfect" when you introduce your dog. They suit small breeds and big ones, fluffy ones and scruffy ones, and they all share something in common, they sound even better when a puppy is actually answering to them.

Mochi
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Mochi


If you haven't noticed Mochi everywhere in the past couple of years, you haven't been paying attention to dog Instagram. It's soft, it's round in the mouth, and it suits the kind of puppy that looks like a marshmallow. Works beautifully for Shih Tzus, Pomeranians, and any dog with a face that's mostly cheeks.

Biscuit
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Biscuit


There's something very right about naming a golden or cream-coloured puppy Biscuit. It's warm, it's a little bit silly, and it ages surprisingly well. A three-year-old Biscuit is still charming. A ten-year-old Biscuit is frankly iconic.

Noodle
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Noodle


Noodle is one of those names that works entirely because of how much personality it implies. It suggests a dog that's a bit wobbly, a bit goofy, and deeply loveable. Dachshunds have been called Noodle so many times it's practically a tradition at this point. But honestly, any lanky or floppy puppy earns it.

Pickle
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Pickle


Pickle names are having a moment, and it's completely deserved. It's cheeky without being try-hard. It suits the kind of puppy that's constantly getting into trouble but makes you laugh every single time. Terriers, Beagles, Dachshunds, basically any dog with too much confidence for their size.

Pudding
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Pudding


There's a softness to Pudding that other food names don't quite manage. It's not as sharp as Biscuit, not as quirky as Mochi. It's just genuinely tender. And the moment you meet a chubby little Labrador puppy called Pudding, you'll understand why it keeps making lists like this one.

Clover
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Clover


Clover sits in a sweet spot between nature name and something that sounds genuinely unique. It's not trying too hard. It suits female puppies particularly well, there's something gentle and grounded about it that matches the way a good dog settles into your life.

Waffles
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Waffles


Waffles is the name for a puppy who is objectively a little bit ridiculous and knows it. Big ears, wonky run, absolutely zero sense of personal space, that's a Waffles. It also photographs well, which matters more than people admit when you're about to spend the next decade taking pictures of this animal.

Fern
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Fern


Short, quiet, unexpectedly perfect. Fern works for the kind of puppy that has a calm soul, the one who sits and watches things rather than immediately destroying them. It's grown in popularity alongside the broader wave of nature names, and it suits medium-sized breeds with a certain gentle quality. Border Collies and Spaniels wear it especially well.

Rolo
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Rolo


Round, smooth, a little bit chocolatey in its associations. Rolo suits the compact, sturdy type of puppy: the Frenchie, the Pug, the Corgi and it has just enough bounce to it that calling it out loud feels good. Which matters, because you will be saying this name approximately four hundred times a day.

Peanut
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Peanut


Peanut has been a great puppy name for decades and it's not stopping now. It's the classic small-dog name, the one grandparents immediately understand and children love. But it also works for big dogs named slightly ironically, which is its own whole category of correct. A Great Dane called Peanut is arguably the best possible outcome.
Whichever name you end up with, the real test is this: say it out loud, at a slightly embarrassing volume, and see if it still feels right. If it does, and if your puppy at least looks in your general direction, you've got your answer.

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