Gender Masculine
Pronounced Pron. MO-dehn(Danish) /ˈmɔɾ.tən/(Norwegian)  [key·simplify]

Meaning & History

Danish and Norwegian form of Martin.

Related Names

Feminine FormMartine(Norwegian)
Other Languages & CulturesMartinus(Ancient Roman) Mattin, Matxin(Basque) Martin(Bulgarian) Martí(Catalan) Martin, Tin(Croatian) Martin(Czech) Maarten, Marten, Martijn, Mart, Martinus, Tijn(Dutch) Martin, Martie, Marty(English) Martin, Mart(Estonian) Martti, Martin(Finnish) Martin(French) Martiño(Galician) Martin, Merten(German) Márton, Martin(Hungarian) Máirtín(Irish) Martino, Tino(Italian) Mārtiņš, Mārcis, Martins(Latvian) Martynas(Lithuanian) Martin(Macedonian) Martyn(Manx) Martîn(Norman) Marcin(Polish) Martim, Martinho(Portuguese) Martin(Romanian) Martin(Russian) Martin(Serbian) Martin(Slovak) Martin, Tine, Tinek(Slovene) Martín(Spanish) Mårten, Martin(Swedish) Martyn(Ukrainian) Martyn(Welsh)
Surname DescendantsMortensen(Danish) Mortensen(Norwegian)

Popularity

People think this name is

classic   natural   wholesome   strong   strange   simple   serious  

Name Days

Denmark: November 11
Norway: November 11

Categories

Entry updated December 7, 2022