Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which an editor of the name is Evil.
gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Bithia f Biblical
Variant of Bithiah.
Bítor m Aragonese
Aragonese form of Victor.
Bitsy f English
Diminutive of Elisabeth.
Bittan f Swedish
Swedish diminutive of Birgitta.
Bitte f Swedish, Danish, Norwegian
Pet form of Birgitta and its various forms.
Biur m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Bjórr.
Bívorr m Old Norse
Variant of Bifurr.
Bivörr m Old Norse
Variant of Bifurr.
Biwa f Japanese
From Japanese 美 (bi) meaning "beautiful" combined with 輪 (wa) meaning "wheel, flower" or 和 (wa) meaning "peace, harmony". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Biwako f Popular Culture
This name combines 琵琶 (biwa), referring to the biwa or Japanese lute, or 枇杷 (biwa), referring to the loquat, with 子 (shi, su, tsu, (-)ko, -ne) meaning "child."... [more]
Biya f Arabic, Indian
Variant of Bia.
Biyori f Japanese
From Japanese 日 (bi) meaning "sun, day" combined with 和 (yori) meaning "peace, harmony". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Biyu f Chinese
Means "jasper" in Chinese.
Bizan m Kurdish
Derived from Kurdish zana meaning "informed, smart".
Bizas m Bosnian, Spanish (Rare), Portuguese (Rare)
Bosnian, Spanish and Portuguese form of Byzas.
Biztha m Biblical
Means "eunuch". In the book of Esther, the second of the seven eunuchs of King Ahasuerus' harem.
Bjargar m Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic variant of Borgar.
Bjarkan m Icelandic (Modern)
Icelandic masculine form of Björk.
Bjarnar m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Bjørnar.
Bjarnarðr m Old Norse
Old Norse form of Bernhard.
Bjarndis f Faroese
Faroese form of Bjarndís.
Bjarnheðin m Faroese
Faroese modern form of Bjarnheðinn.
Bjarnheðinn m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse bjǫrn "bear" and heðinn "jacket of fur or skin".
Bjarnlaug f Icelandic
Feminine form of Bjarnlaugur.
Bjarnlaugur m Icelandic
Icelandic younger form of Biarnlaugr.
Bjarnsteinn m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Bjørnstein.
Bjarnvarðr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse bjǫrn "bear" and vǫrðr "guard".
Bjarnvarður m Faroese
Modern Faroese form of Bjarnvarðr.
Bjart m Norwegian
Variant of Bjarte.
Bjarti m Faroese
Faroese form of Bjartr.
Bjedruška f Sorbian
Upper Sorbian form of Friederike.
Bjólan m Old Norse
Old Norse form of Beollán.
Bjølla f Faroese
Variant of Bjalla.
Bjǫlr m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Younger form of Belwar. In Norse mythology this was the name of a jǫtunn.
Bjor m Norwegian (Rare)
Modern form of Bjórr.
Bjørga f Norwegian
Short form of names starting or ending with the Old Norse name element bjǫrg meaning "help, save, rescue".
Bjørge m Norwegian
Masculine form of Bjørg or a short form of any male name beginning with the Old Norse name element bjǫrg "help, save, rescue".
Bjørgfinnur m Faroese
Faroese variant of Bergfinnur.
Bjørgny f Norwegian (Rare)
Norwegian form of Borgný.
Bjǫrgulfr m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Borgulfr.
Björgvin m Icelandic
Derived from the Old Norse elements bjǫrg "help" or "deliverance" and vinr "friend".
Bjorn m Various
Variant of Björn or Bjørn used outside of Scandinavia and Germany.
Björnólfur m Icelandic
Icelandic younger form of Björnúlfr.
Bjørnvald m Norwegian (Rare)
Formed from Bjørn and the Old Norse element valdr "ruler". Also compare the Germanic cognate Bernwald.
Bjórr m Old Norse
From Old Norse bjórr meaning "beaver".
Björt f Icelandic
Feminine form of Bjartur.
Bjørt f Faroese
Faroese form of Bjǫrt.
Blå m & f Swedish (Rare)
Means "blue" in Swedish. Ultimately derived from Old Norse blár meaning "blue" but often denoting "dark, black" (compare Bláinn). A few hundred years ago sometimes used as a variant or short form of Blasius.
Blade m German (East Prussian)
East Prussian German short form of Ladislaus.
Blæcstan m Anglo-Saxon
Means "black stone" in Old English, from blæc "black" and stan "stone".
Blængur m Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Blæingr.
Blær m & f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Directly taken from the Old Norse name element blǣr "wind gust, gentle breeze".
Blagodat f Bulgarian (Rare)
Derived from Bulgarian благодат "blessing, benediction".
Blagomir m Bulgarian, Serbian, Croatian (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements blag "good, gentle, kind, blessed" and mir "peace".
Blaia f Catalan (Rare)
Feminine form of Blai.
Bláinn m Old Norse
From Old Norse blár meaning "blue, dark, black".
Blaisine f French (Rare)
Feminine form of Blaise.
Blancard m Medieval English
Possibly a variant of Blanchard.
Blanchefleur f Medieval French, Literature
Meaning "white flower" from the French elements blanche and fleur. Blanchefleur was the name of the heroine in the medieval romance of Floris and Blanchefleur. This was also the given name of the mother of Tristan in Tristan and Iseult.
Blane m American
Variant of Blaine.
Blankiflúr f Literature
Old Norse form of Blanchefleur.
Blapþvari m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Means "babbling pole; staff". This is the name of a Jotunn in Norse mythology.
Blayden m English
Variant of Bladen.
Blayk m English
Variant of Blake.
Blayke m & f English (Modern)
Variant of Blake.
Blayr f English
Variant of Blair.
Bledar m Albanian
Variant of Bled.
Blessed f & m English (Puritan), African
From the English word "blessed" meaning "having divine aid, or protection, or other blessing; held in veneration; revered", ultimately from Old English blētsian, blēdsian "to consecrate (with blood)".
Bleta f Albanian
Derived from Albanian bletë "bee". According to Albanian folk belief, the bee is a sacred animal: when an animal ceases to live, Albanians predominantly use the verb ngordh while when a bee ceases to live, the verb vdes is used (which is used to refer to human death), alluding that bees are beings of a higher caste, comparable to humans.
Blima f Yiddish
Variant of Bluma.
Blimy f Yiddish
Diminutive of Blima.
Blíða f Icelandic (Rare)
Directly taken from Old Norse blíða "friendliness, gentleness" (compare Blida).
Blithe f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Blythe.
Bllauche f Norman
Cotentinais Norman form of Blanche.
Blomman f & m Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Means "the flower" in Swedish.
Bloom f English
From the English word bloom, ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *bʰleh₃- ("to thrive, flower, bloom").
Bloom m English
Transferred use of the surname Bloom.
Bluebird m & f English (American, Rare)
Very rare but has been used in the US since the 1700s, particularly in Mississippi and Oklahoma.
Blyth m & f English
Variant of Blythe.
Bo m & f English
Variant of Beau or diminutive of Robert, Beaufort, Beauregard, Bonita or Bonnie.
m Old Norse
Variant of Búi.
Boa f Greenlandic, Swedish
Feminine form of Búi.
Bóandi m Old Norse
Means "farmer, peasant, landowner" in Old Norse.
Boba f Pashto
Means "innocent" or "genuine" in Pashto.
Bobba f Icelandic
Variant of Bobbi.
Bobbye f English
Variant of Bobby.
Bobi f & m English (Rare), Welsh
Variant of Bobby.
Bobolayefa f Ijaw
Means "nothing can be compared to my own" in Ijaw.
Bobomiegha f Ijaw
Means "I didn't do it on my own" in Ijaw.
Bocefus m English
Variant of Bocephus.
Bodaway m Navajo
Means "fire maker" in Navajo.
Bodela f Swedish (Archaic)
Swedish dialectal variant form of Bodil recorded in Scania and Halland.
Bodhild f Norwegian
Variant of Bodil.
Bodhill f Norwegian (Rare)
Variant of Bodhild (see Bodil).
Bodhin m English
Variant of Boden.
Bodisere f Ijaw
Means "she likes to come to the world" in Ijaw.
Bodza f Hungarian (Rare)
Directly taken from Hungarian bodza "elderberry; elder (tree)".
Bóel f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Boel.
Boeld f Old Danish
Old Danish form of Bóthildr.
Boeline f Danish
Diminutive of Boel.
Boell f Danish (Rare, Archaic)
Former Danish variant of Boel.
Bofen f & m Chinese (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Bo 2 and Fen 1.
Bófi m Old Swedish
From Old Norse bófi meaning "knave, rogue."
Bofo m Spanish
Diminutive of Rodolfo.
Boga f Icelandic
Feminine form of Bogi.
Bogáta f Hungarian
Feminine form of Bogát.
Bogata m Russian
Means "wealthy" in Russian.
Bogdanŭ m Medieval Russian
Old East Slavic form of Bogdan.
Bogey f Icelandic (Rare)
Derived from Old Norse bogi meaning "bow" (compare Bogi) combined with ey meaning "island" or ey meaning "good fortune"... [more]
Bøggild m Danish (Modern)
Danish variant of Bøgild.
Bogi m Old Norse, Icelandic (Rare), Faroese
From Old Norse bogi meaning "bow".
Bogica f Slovene
Feminine diminutive of Bogo.
Bogie m English
Diminutive of Bogart.
Bogoljub m Croatian, Serbian
Derived from Bog "God" and ljubiti ''to love".
Bogomira f Slovene
Feminine form of Bogomir.
Bogoris m Medieval Slavic, Bulgar
Bulgar variant of Boris.
Bogumila f Croatian
Feminine form of Bogumil.
Bogusia f Polish
Diminutive of Bogdana, Bogumiła, and Bogusława.
Bo-gyeong f & m Korean
From Sino-Korean 甫 "begin; man, father; great" or 寶 "treasure, jewel; precious, rare" (bo), and 炅 "brilliance" or 璟 "luster of gem" (gyeong).
Bo-hee f & m Korean
Variant transcription of Bo-hui.
Bohumíra f Czech
Feminine form of Bohumír.
Bohuš m Slovak
Diminutive of Bohuslav, used as a given name in its own right.
Boian m Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Боян (see Boyan).
Boj m North Frisian
Variant of Boy.
Bøje m Danish
Danish variant of Boye.... [more]
Bokamoso m & f South African, Sotho
Means "future".
Bokang f Sotho
Means "praise" or "rejoice" in Sotho.
Bol f Norwegian (Archaic)
Short form of Bodil.
Bóla m Old Norse
From Old Norse bóla meaning "blain, botch".
Bola f Greenlandic
Short form of Bolatta.
Bolade m & f Yoruba
Means "comes with wealth" in Yoruba.
Bolatta f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Bolette. A known bearer of this name is Bolatta Silis-Høegh (1981-), a Greenlandic artist who resides in Denmark.
Bolden m English
Transferred use of the surname Bolden.
Boldi m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Buldi.
Boldt m English (American, Archaic)
Transferred use of the surname Boldt.
Bolemir m Medieval Polish
Derived from Slavic bole "large" combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Bòlesk m Kashubian
Diminutive of Bòlesłôw.
Boleslovas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Bolesław.
Bòlesłôw m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bolesław.
Bolethe f Danish
Variant of Bolette.
Bolette f Danish, Theatre, Greenlandic, Norwegian (Rare), Swedish (Rare)
Diminutive of Bodil. Bolette Wrangel is a character in the play 'Fruen fra havet' (Engl. 'The Lady from the Sea') written by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen in 1888.
Boli f Jewish, Judeo-Spanish, Turkish
Means "honey" in Turkish.
Boli m Medieval English
Medieval English form of Bolli.
Bolian m & f Chinese
Combination of Bo 2 , Li 1 and An 1 .
Boline f Danish (Rare)
Elaborated form of Bol.
Bolli m Old Norse, Icelandic
From Old Norse bolli meaning "round one."
Bolouikie m & f Ijaw
Means "think of the future" in Ijaw.
Bolour f Persian
Means "crystal" in Persian.
Bolt m Popular Culture, Pet
An animated dog being the title hero in the movie 'Bolt' (2008). The name comes from a lightning bolt mark on his side.
Boluwaji m & f Yoruba
Means "wakes up with the lord" in Yoruba.
Bölverkur m Icelandic
Modern Icelandic form of Bǫlverkr.
Bom f & m Korean (Modern)
From native Koream 봄 (bom) meaning "spring(time)."... [more]
Bomani m Yao
Means "warrior" in Yao.
Bo-mi f Korean
From Sino-Korean 普 "universal, general, widespread" and 美 "beautiful, pretty; pleasing".
Bomo f & m Ijaw
Means "praise" in Ijaw.
Bompaka m & f Kongo
Means "old age" in Kikongo
Bonajoia f Medieval Jewish
Derived from Old French bone joie "good joy".
Bonajuncta f Medieval Catalan, Medieval Jewish
From Latin Bonaiuncta, in which the first element derives from Latin bonus meaning "good" and the second element means "arrival" (ultimately deriving from the Latin verb iungere)... [more]
Bonanno m Medieval Italian
Means "good year" in Italian.
Bonaparte m Italian (Rare), French (Rare)
Variant and French form of Buonaparte.
Bonawentura m Polish
Polish form of Bonaventura.
Bondai m Japanese
From Japanese 凡 (bon) meaning "ordinary, common, mediocre" combined with 大 (dai) meaning "big, great". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Bóndi m Old Danish, Norse Mythology, Old Norse
Variant of Bóandi. This is the name of one of Karl and Snør's sons in Norse mythology.
Bongai f Shona
Means "be thankful" in a Shona dialect.
Bonginkosi m Zulu
Means "thanksgiving" in Zulu.
Bong-ju m Korean
From Sino-Korean 鳳 "male phoenix; symbol of joy" and 柱 "pillar, post; support". A famous bearer is South Korean marathoner Lee Bong-ju (1970-).
Bongsu m & f Malay
Means "the youngest" in Malay, used for the last born child.
Bǫngull m Old Norse
Old Norse byname meaning "blighter, rascal".
Boni m & f Spanish
Diminutive of Bonifacio and Bonifacia.
Bonifacas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Boniface.
Bonifaci m Gascon, Provençal, Lengadocian
Gascon, Provençal and Languedocian form of Bonifatius.
Bonifacius m Dutch
Variant of Bonifatius (see Boniface).
Bonifaes m Medieval Flemish
Medieval Flemish form of Boniface.
Bonifazio m Italian
Italian form of Boniface.
Bonitas m Lithuanian (Modern, Rare)
Lithuanian masculine form of Bonita.
Bonny f English
Variant of Bonnie.
Bono m Croatian (Rare)
Croatian form of Bonus.
Bonsenyor m Judeo-Catalan (Archaic), Medieval Jewish
Means "good lord". In modern times, more common as a surname.
Borah f Korean (Modern)
Variant transcription of Bora 3.
Boram f & m Korean
From native Korean 보람 (boram) meaning "fruitful, useful, worthwhile."... [more]
Boran m Khmer
Means "ancient" in Khmer, or a reference to the distant past.
Borbardha f Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian borë "snow" and bardhë "white".
Böret f Swedish (Rare)
Dialectal variant of Berit found in Norrland and Västergötland.
Borey m Khmer
Means "great city" in Khmer.
Borga f Old Norse
Short form of names beginning with or ending in the element borg.
Borgarhjǫrtr f Norse Mythology
Derived from Old Norse borg "fortress, citadel" and hjǫrtr "hart, stag". In the Norse sagas, Þóra Borgarhjǫrtr is the second wife of Ragnar Loðbrók.
Borgarr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse borg "castle" and herr "army".
Børger m Norwegian (Archaic)
Dialectal variant of Birger or variant of Borgar.
Borger m Norwegian
Variant of Birger or Borgar.
Borggæirr m Old Norse
From Old Norse borg "castle" and geirr "spear".
Borgny f Norwegian
Modern Norwegian form of Borgný.
Borgrún f Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Borgrun.
Borgþór m Icelandic
Icelandic younger variant of Bergþór.
Borgulfr m Old Norse
Combination of Old Norse bjarga "to help" (but also associated with borg "castle, fortification, stronghold") and ulfr "wolf."
Borgunna f Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements borg "stronghold, fortification, castle" and unna "to love".
Boriana f Bulgarian, Albanian
Variant transliteration of Bulgarian Боряна (see Boryana).
Bóris m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Boris.
Boriša f & m Vlach
Means "fighter", from Vlach boriti meaning "to fight".
Borisav m Vlach
Means "person who fights" in Vlach.
Borisava f Vlach
Feminine form of Borisav.
Borisch m Yiddish (Archaic)
Yiddish form of Baruch.
Borisz m Hungarian
Hungarian adoption of Boris.
Borka f Serbian, Croatian
Feminine form of Borko.
Bormey f Khmer
Means "magical power or spirit" in Khmer.
Borni f Norwegian (Archaic)
Dialectal variant of Borgny.
Boromir m Literature
Means "jeweled hand" in Sindarin. In 'The Lord of the Rings' (1954) by J. R. R. Tolkien, this is the name of one of the nine walkers in the Fellowship of the Ring.
Borõss m Estonian
Estonian variant of Boris used to transcribe Ukrainian Борис.
Boroszló m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Bratislav.
Börta f Swedish (Archaic)
Dialectal variant of Birta recorded in Norrland and Västergötland.
Boruch m Yiddish
Yiddish form of Baruch.
Boruk m Ethiopian
Variant of Biruk.
Boryana f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Boryan.
Borzysław m Polish
Polish form of Borislav.
Borzysława f Polish
Feminine form of Borzysław.
Bosco m Spanish, Italian (Archaic)
Transferred use of the surname Bosco borne by the catholic saint Giovanni Bosco (also known as Don Bosco).
Bo-seon m Korean
From Sino-Korean 潽 "boiling water spilling out" and 善 "good, virtuous, charitable, kind".
Bósi m Old Danish
From Old Norse bósi meaning "plump, chubby man".
Bosi m Medieval English, Old Danish
Old Danish form of Bósi.
Boss m American
Possibly transferred use of the surname Boss, or taken from the English word boss, meaning "one who is in charge", from Middle Dutch baes "master of a household, friend"... [more]
Bosten m & f English (Modern)
Variant of Boston.
Botel m & f Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Former variant of Bothild or Botolv.
Bótfríðr f Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse bót "remedy" and fríðr "beautiful".
Bótheiðr f Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements bót "bettering, help" and heiðr "honour".
Bóthilda f Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Bóthildr.
Bothilder f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Bóthildr.
Bǫðmóðr m Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements bǫð "battle" and móðr "mind, spirit, courage".
Böðvildr f Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse bǫð and hildr, both meaning "battle".
Bóti m Medieval English, Old Norse
Originally a byname meaning "man from Bute" in parts of Scandinavia, it later became a diminutive of names containing the name element bot "remedy, help".
Botil f Swedish
Variant of Botel.