Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the description contains the keywords mouth or of or river.
gender
usage
keyword
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Naoma f American (Rare)
Latinate variant of Naomi 1.
Naómi f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Naomi 1.
Naómí f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Naomi 1.
Naomí f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Naomi 1.
Naomia f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Naomi 1.
Naomija f Latvian (Rare)
Latvian form of Naomi 1.
Naomika f Indian, Hindi
An epithet of the goddesses Durga and Lakshmi.
Nâonoun f Norman
Diminutive of Anne 1.
Naos m Astronomy, Ancient Greek
From Ancient Greek ναύς meaning "ship". It is a traditional name of the star Zeta Puppis. The star originally belonged to the former constellation Argo Navis, depicting the mythical ship of the Argonauts, but the ship has now been divided into three distinct constellations, with Puppis representing the stern of the ship.
Naoshi m Japanese
From Japanese 侃 (naoshi) meaning "upright and strong", or from Japanese 尚 (naoshi) meaning "still, as always". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.... [more]
Naosuke m Japanese
This name combines 直 (jika, jiki, choku, su.gu, tada.chini, nao.ki, nao.su, -nao.su, nao.ru, nao) meaning "fix, frankness, honesty, repair, straightaway" or 尚 (shou, nao) meaning "esteem, furthermore, still, yet" with 典 (ten, den, suke) meaning "ceremony, code, law, rule", 亮 (ryou, akiraka, suke) meaning "clear, help", 輔 (fu, ho, tasu.keru, suke) meaning "help", 裕 (yuu, suke) meaning "abundant, fertile, rich", 介 (kai, suke) meaning "concern oneself with, jammed in, mediate, shellfish", 助 (jo, suke, tasu.keru) meaning "assist, help, rescue", 佑 (u, yuu, tasu.keru, suke) meaning "assist, help" or 弼 (hitsu, tasu.keru, yudame, suke) meaning "help."... [more]
Naoual f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نوال‎‎ (see Nawal) chiefly used in North Africa.
Naouel f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نوال (see Nawal) chiefly used in North Africa.
Naoufal m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نوفل (see Nawfal) chiefly used in North Africa.
Naoufel m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نوفل (see Nawfal) chiefly used in North Africa.
Naoul f Arabic
Variant of Nawal
Naouma f Greek (Rare)
Feminine form of Naoum.
Naoying f Chinese
From the Chinese 婥 (nào) meaning "beautiful" and 莹 (yíng) meaning "luster of gems, bright, lustrous" or 瑛 (yīng) meaning "luster of gems, crystal".
Naoyuki m Japanese
From Japanese 直 (nao) meaning "straight" combined with 行 (yuki) meaning "row, line of text". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Nap m English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Diminutive of Napoleon. Most notably used by Hall of Fame baseball player Nap Lajoie.
Napa f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Napha.
Napaaq m Greenlandic
Younger form of Napâĸ.
Napaartoq m & f Greenlandic
Younger form of Napârtoĸ.
Napaatsiaq m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Napãtsiaĸ.
Napaga f Dagbani
It's a name popular with royals of the Dagbani tribe of Northern Ghana. It means the queen's mother.
Napapen f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นภาเพ็ญ (see Naphaphen).
Naparat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Napharat.
Napasu m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Napasso.
Napawan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Naphawan.
Naphatson f Thai
Derived from Thai ภัสสร (pát-sŏn) meaning "light, halo, rays (of sunshine)".
Naphatsorn f Thai
Alternate transcription of Naphatson.
Naphtalia f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Naphtali, influenced by Natalia.
Naphtuhim m Biblical
Naphtuhim is a son of Mizraim and grandson of Ham first mentioned in Genesis 10:13.
Napir m Near Eastern Mythology, Elamite Mythology
In the Elamite pantheon, Napir was the god of the moon. Some sources state that the meaning of his name is "(the) shining one", but this is questionable - it is more likely that it is derived from Elamite nap or napir meaning "god" (see Napirisha).
Napir-asu f Ancient Near Eastern, Elamite
Possibly derived from the name of the Elamite god of the moon Napir. Name borne by Napir-Asu, who was the queen of Elam during the Middle Elamite period... [more]
Napirisha m Near Eastern Mythology, Elamite Mythology
This is the epithet of the god Humban and he was almost exclusively known by this name in later times. It means "Great God" in Elamite, derived from Elamite nap or napir "god" combined with Elamite risha or rišarra "great" (also compare Elamite rishair)... [more]
Napisat f Karachay-Balkar
Karachay-Balkar form of Nafisa.
Nápla f Irish
A variant of Annaple, which is a Scottish (?) form of Annabel.
Napo m Medieval Italian, Italian (Rare)
Short form of Napoleone. A known bearer of this name was the Italian nobleman Napoleone "Napo" della Torre (died in 1278 AD).
Napoleão m Portuguese (Rare)
Portuguese form of Napoleon.
Napoléioun m Norman
Cotentinais Norman form of Napoleon.
Napoleó m Catalan
Catalan form of Napoleon.
Napoleón m Spanish
Spanish form of Napoleon.
Napoleona f Medieval Italian, Italian (Archaic)
Feminine form of Napoleone. A known bearer of this name was Elisa Baciocchi Levoy (1806–1869), a niece of the French emperor Napoléon Bonaparte (1769-1821)... [more]
Napoleonas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Napoleone (see Napoleon).
Napoléone f French (Archaic)
French form of Napoleona. A known bearer of this name was Charlotte Bonaparte (1802-1839), a niece of the French emperor Napoléon Bonaparte (1769-1821)... [more]
Napoleyon m Walloon
Walloon form of Napoleon.
Napolin m French (Quebec, Archaic)
Diminutive of Napoléon. In other words, you could say that this name is the French cognate of Napolino.
Napoline f French (Quebec, Archaic)
Diminutive of Napoléone. In other words, you could say that this name is the feminine form of Napolin.
Napolino m Medieval Italian, Italian (Archaic)
Diminutive of Napoleone. It probably came into being independently, but it is also possible that it evolved (as a contracted form) from the diminutive Napoleoncino.
Napolo m Medieval Italian
Possibly from Napoli, the Italian name for the city of Naples.
Nappy f Irish
An Irish woman's name, current in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, particularly in the west of Ireland among Irish speakers. Described as a short form of Penelope, it seems to have served as a customary anglicisation of the Gaelic name Nuala/Fionnuala
Napsugár f Hungarian (Modern)
Modern name from the vocabulary word napsugár "sunbeam, sunshine", itself a compound of the vocabulary words nap "sun, day" and sugár "beam, ray". Its name days are March 21 and July 3.
Napulione m Corsican (Archaic)
Corsican form of Napoleon, rarely given today.
Naqai m Ancient Hebrew
Means "innocent." Compare Arabic Naqi. Features in Sanhedrin 43a in the Talmud, during an apocryphal description of the death of Yeshua the Nazarene, as one of his five disciples... [more]
Naqatanibas m Ancient Egyptian (Arabized), Medieval Arabic
Arabic of Nectanebo cheifly used by medieval Arab authors.
Naqeebullah m Arabic, Pakistani, Urdu
Urdu form of Naqibullah as well as an Arabic variant transcription of the name.
Näqiä f Bashkir
Bashkir feminine form of Naqi.
Naqi'a f Ancient Near Eastern
Of unknown meaning or origin.... [more]
Naqib m Arabic, Persian
Derived from the Arabic noun نقيب (naqib) meaning "chief, leader, captain". Known bearers of this name include the Afghan cricketer Naqib Nangarhari (b. 1998) and the Persian storyteller Naqib ol Mamalek, who is the author of the popular Persian epic Amir Arsalan (19th century AD).
Naqibullah m Arabic, Afghan
Derived from the Arabic noun نقيب (naqib) meaning "chief, leader, captain" (see Naqib) combined with the Arabic noun الله (Allah) meaning "God" (see Allah).... [more]
Naqibullo m Tajik (Rare), Uzbek (Rare)
Tajik and Uzbek form of Naqibullah.
Naqqoq m Greenlandic
Younger form of Narĸoĸ.
Naquan m African American (Rare)
Combination of the phonetic elements na and quan.
Nár m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Derived from ("dead person"). This is the name of a dwarf in Norse mythology.
Nara f Armenian (Rare)
Short form of Gyulnara, the Armenian form of Gulnar.
Nara f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Possibly a form of Naarah.
Nara f American (South, Rare, Archaic)
Possibly a variant of Nora 1. It might, however, also be a simplified spelling of Naarah.
Narachan m Korean (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Nara and the present determiner form of verb 차다 (chada) meaning "to fill."
Narae f & m Korean (Modern)
Variant of native Korean 날개 (nalgae) meaning "wing." It can also be written with hanja, combining a na hanja, like 娜 meaning "beauty" or 羅 meaning "net(ting)," with a rae hanja, such as 萊, referring to the goosefoot, or 來 meaning "coming."
Narak m Polish
Diminutive form of Narcyz.
Naraku m Popular Culture
From 奈 (na) meaning "Nara, what?" and 落 (raku) meaning "drop, come down, to fall, leave behind". Together, 奈落 means "hell, the underworld". This is the name of a demon from the manga and anime 'Inuyasha'.
Narancia m Popular Culture
Narancia Ghirga is a main character from manga 'JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 5: Vento Aureo'. His name is a mix of the words naranja and arancia both meaning "orange (fruit)" in Spanish and Italian.
Naranja f Swedish (Rare, ?), Finnish (Rare, ?)
From the Spanish word naranja meaning "orange (fruit)", a cognate of Orange.
Narantuya f Mongolian
Derived from Mongolian наран (naran) meaning "sun" and туяа (tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)".
Narasimhan m Tamil, Malayalam
Tamil and Malayalam form of Narasimha.
Naravas m Berber
Personal name of Naravas, a Berber Numidian king and Hannibal's brother in law.
Narayani f Hinduism, Indian, Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi, Bengali, Nepali
Feminine form of Narayana. This is an epithet of the Hindu goddesses Lakshmi and Durga.
Nárbhfhlaith f Irish (Rare)
Modern Irish form of Nárbflaith.
Narcaeus m Greek Mythology
A son of Dionysus and Narcaea, established a sanctuary of Athena Narcaea in Elis, and also introduced there the worship of Dionysus. (Paus. v. 16. § 5.)
Narcedalia f Spanish (Mexican)
Allegedly a combination of Narcisa and Dalia 1 (i.e., the narcissus flower and the dahlia flower)... [more]
Narcëza f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Narcissa.
Narcis m Romanian, Lengadocian, Provençal
Romanian, Languedocian and Provençal form of Narcissus.
Narcisco m Spanish
Variant of Narciso, probably influenced by Francisco.
Narciset m Catalan
Diminutive of Narcis.
Narciseta f Catalan
Diminutive of Narcisa.
Narcisso m Italian
Italian form of Narcissus via Narkissos and variant of Narciso.
Narcissza f Hungarian
Cognate of Narcissa, meaning "daffodil".
Narcisszusz m Hungarian
Masculine form of Nárcisz, meaning "daffodil".
Narcisu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Narciso.
Nárcisz f Hungarian
Originally the feminine form of Narcisszusz. Since this name also coincides with Hungarian nárcisz "daffodil", it is now considered a nature name.
Narcizas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Narkissos via its latinized form Narcissus.
Narck m Kashubian
Diminutive of Narcyz.
Narcy f English
Diminutive form of Narcissa and Narcisa.
Narcyza f Polish
Polish form of Narcissa.
Nard m Dutch, Limburgish
Short form of Bernard and Leonard, which is primarily used in the south of the Netherlands.
Nardjes f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of نرجس (see Narjis) chiefly used in Algeria
Nardo m Medieval Italian
Short form of names ending in nardo, such as Bernardo or Leonardo.
Nardos f Ethiopian
Ultimately from Greek νάρδος (nardos) meaning "nard plant, spikenard; fragrant oil or ointment of the nard plant", a word used in the New Testament to refer to the expensive perfume poured on Jesus at Bethany (an event known as the 'anointing of Jesus').
Nare f Korean
Variant of native Korean 날개 (nalgae) meaning "wing." It can also be written with hanja. From 娜(na) meaning "beauty", 羅(na) meaning "silk" or 奈(na) meaning "apple tree" combine with 來(rae, re) meaning "come, arrive" or 萊(re) meaning "goosefoot"... [more]
Naree f Thai
Alternate transcription of Nari.
Nareerat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นารีรัตน์ (see Narirat).
Nareewan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นารีวรรณ (see Nariwan).
Nareh f Armenian
Alternate transcription of Nare.
Narendar m Indian
Variant of Narendra.
Narender m Hindi
Alternate transcription of Hindi नरेन्द्र or नरेंद्र (see Narendra).
Narfi m Icelandic (Rare), Norse Mythology
Derived from Proto-Norse *nǫrr "narrow", possibly as in "close minded, oppressive". Narfi is the name of two characters in Norse Mythology: a son of Loki and a jötunn (the father of Nótt).
Nargess f Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian نرگس (see Narges).
Nargiz f Kazakh
Kazakh form of Narges
Nari m Norse Mythology
Nari is one of the sons of Loki and Sigyn. At the end of the epic poem "Lokasenna" Nari is said to be the brother of Narvi (also written as Narfi), while Sturlusson's Prose Edda uses Narvi as another name for Nari and names Váli as his brother.
Nari m Provençal
Provençal form of Nazarius.
Nari f Thai, Khmer
Means "woman, lady" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit नारी (nari). It is also an alternate transcription of Khmer ណារី (see Nary) of the same meaning and origin.
Naria f Celtic Mythology
Naria was a Gallo-Roman goddess worshiped in western Switzerland. While her functions have been lost to time, it can be deduced from the sole image of her that she may have been a goddess of good luck and blessings, as her image was done in the generic style of Fortuna, the Roman goddess of luck... [more]
Nariah f English (Modern)
Feminine variant of Neriah influenced via a rhyming variant of Mariah.
Narice f Literature, English (Rare)
Coined for a short story called The Dice of God by South African romance novelist Cynthia Stockley (1863-1936). The short story was serialized in Cosmopolitan magazine starting in February of 1926, and appears to have been expanded and published as a stand-alone book the same year.
Nariko f & m Georgian
Diminutive of names that start with ნარ- (Nar-) or contain -ნარ- (-nar-) near the end, such as Nargiza and Dinara for women and Nariman and Ednar for men.
Nəriman m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Nariman.
Nariman m Persian Mythology, Persian, Georgian (Rare), Kazakh, Kumyk, Lezgin, Tatar
From the Avestan name Nairemanah which meant "manly mind" or "heroic minded", derived Avestan from nairiia meaning "heroic, manly" and manah meaning "mind, thought".... [more]
Narimene f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Algerian Arabic feminine form of Nariman.
Narimon m Uzbek, Tajik
Uzbek and Tajik form of Nariman.
Narin m Thai
Thai form of Narendra.
Narineh f Armenian
Alternate transcription of Narine.
Naris m Thai
Alternate transcription of Narit.
Narius m Greek Mythology, Biblical
Derived from Greek(neros) meaning "water". In Greek and Roman myth this was the name of a god of the sea. This was also the name of a Roman saint of the 1st century, a member of the army, who was martyred with his companion Achilleus because they refused to execute Christians.
Nariyah f English (Modern)
Most likely a variant of Neriah (Compare Sariah).
Narjes f Persian
Variant of Narges.
Narjess f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نرجس (see Narjis) chiefly used in North Africa.
Narjiss f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نرجس (see Narjis) chiefly used in North Africa.
Narjisse f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نرجس (see Narjis) chiefly used in North Africa.
Narkis f & m Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
First name that also used as a last name, it's a kind of a flower. Taken from the Greek name Narcissus
Narmada f Indian, Hindi
Narmada is the 5th longest river in India. The name in Sanskrit also means "The Giver of Pleasure".
Narmin f Arabic
Variant transcription of Nermin.
Narmina f Azerbaijani
Variant transcription of Nərminə.
Narongdech m Thai
Alternate transcription of Narongdet.
Narongdej m Thai
Alternate transcription of Narongdet.
Narra f Filipino
From the name of the national tree of the Philippines, known for its strength and resilience.
Narsai m Assyrian
Assyrian or Syriac form of Narseh. This name was borne by a notable Syriac poet-theologian from the 5th century AD.
Narsimhan m Tamil, Hinduism
The hindu Mythology shows that the hindu god of vishnu took ten forms to destroy evil on earth. one of the form was narsimha which means part human-part lion
Nart m Circassian
From the name of a race of superhuman giants in Caucasian mythology, derived from Proto-Iranian narθra- meaning "manhood" (from h₂nḗr meaning "man").
Narta f Albanian
Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from Albanian nartë "limpid, sparkling clean water" and derivation from Narta, the name of a town in southwest Albania known for its wines.
Nartach f Turkmen
Combination of; nar and täç, which mean "fire" and "crown" consequently. Combined meaning is "crown of fire".
Naru m & f Korean (Modern)
From native Korean 나루 (naru) meaning "(river) port, ferry crossing."
Naruemol f Thai
Alternate transcription of Naruemon.
Naruephol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Naruepol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Naruepon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Naruko f Japanese
From 鳴 (naru) meaning "ringing" and 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations can be used.... [more]
Narumi f & m Japanese
This name can be used to combine 成 (sei, jou, na.ru, (-)na.su) meaning "to be, to become," 也 (e, ya, ka, nari, mata, naru), related to 成, 育 (iku, soda.tsu/chi/teru, haguku.mu, naru) meaning "to bring up, to raise, to rear" or 鳴 (mei, na.ku, na.ru, na.rasu) meaning "to sound, to ring, to echo" with 美 (bi, mi, utsuku.shii) meaning "beauty," 実 (shitsu, jitsu, makotoni, mi, michi.ru, mino(.ru)), which means "reality, truth" or 海 (kai, umi, mi) meaning "sea, ocean."... [more]
Narumol f Thai
Alternate transcription of Naruemon.
Narumon f Thai
Alternate transcription of Naruemon.
Narundi f Near Eastern Mythology, Elamite Mythology
In the Elamite pantheon, Narundi was the goddess of victory and thus we can consider her to be a war goddess. It is uncertain what the meaning of her name was in the Elamite language. She, along with the goddesses Shiashum and Niarzina, was said to be a sister of the 'great goddess', namely Kiririsha... [more]
Naruno f Japanese
From Japanese 成 (naru) meaning "to become" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle. Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Naruphol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Naruphon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Narupol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Narupon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai นฤพล (see Naruephon).
Naruto m Japanese, Popular Culture
Could mean "roaring gate" from Old Japanese 鳴 (naru) meaning “to ring; to roar; to sound” combined with 門 (to) meaning “gate, door”. This name is used to describe both a narrow between Awaji Island and Shikoku in Japan and the strong whirlpools that occur there.... [more]
Narve m Norwegian
Norwegian form of Narfi.
Narvel m American (Rare)
Borne by rockabilly singer Narvel Felts (1938-) and by Narvel Blackstock, second husband of singer Reba McEntire. Probably a variant of Norval.
Narvi m Norse Mythology
Narvi is one of the sons of Loki and Sigyn. At the end of the epic poem "Lokasenna" Narvi is said to be the brother of Nari, while in Snorri Sturlusson's Prose Edda Narvi is another name for Nari.
Narziso m Aragonese
Aragonese form of Narciso.
Narziss m German
Modern German spelling of Narziß.
Narziß m German (Archaic), Literature
German form of Narkissos via its latinized form Narcissus. A known bearer of this name was the German doctor and psychologist Narziß Ach (1871-1946).... [more]
Nas m Arabic
Diminutive of Nasir and Naseer.
Nasaasaq f & m Greenlandic
Younger form of Nasaussaĸ.
Nasalsa f Meroitic
Meaning uncertain. Name borne by a Nubian queen who lived during the Twenty-fifth dynasty of Egypt.
Nasari m Gascon
Gascon form of Nazarius.
Nasaro m Japanese, Korean
Japanese and Korean transliterated form of Lazarus.
Nasaruddin m Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian form of Nasr al-Din.
Nasarudin m Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian variant of Nasr al-Din.
Nasaussaĸ f & m Greenlandic
Greenlandic name meaning "hood of a woman's furjacket" or "the bladder on the head of a hooded seal".
Näsbiörn m Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant spelling of Næsbiörn.
Näsbiorn m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Næsbiǫrn.
Naseema f Arabic, Urdu, Dhivehi
Arabic alternate transcription of Nasima as well as the Urdu and Dhivehi form.
Naseeruddin m Indian (Muslim)
Variant spelling of Nasir al-Din. Means "helper of religion", derived from Arabic نصير (naseer) "helper" and دين (din) "religion".
Nasef m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصف (see Nasif).
Naserian f Eastern African
Means “the lucky one" in Samburu, a variant of Maasai language.
Nashawn m African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the popular name prefix na and Shawn.
Nashay f African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the popular phonetic elements na and shay, perhaps inspired by Shanae.
Nashira f Astronomy
Nashira, also known as Gamma Capricorni, is a bright star in the constellation of Capricornus. ... [more]
Nashley f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Combination of the phonetic element na with the name Ashley.
Nashly f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Variant of Nashley or Nasly. This name was likely brought to public attention in 2023 by social media influencer Nashley Vazquez.
Nashon m African American (Rare)
Likely a variant of the biblical name Nahshon (perhaps via Naashon, the spelling used in the King James Version).
Nashonda f African American (Rare)
Combination of the popular prefix na with the name Shonda. It can be spelled NaShonda or Nashonda.
Nashruddin m Indonesian, Malay
Indonesian and Malay variant of Nasr al-Din.
Nashton m English (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Nash and the popular name suffix -ton.
Nashville m & f English (Rare)
This name is derived from the city of Nashville (and capital of Tennessee in the USA)... [more]
Nasi m Catalan
Diminutive of Ignasi.
Näsibä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Nasiba.
Nasiba f Arabic
Feminization of Nasib.
Nasibah f Arabic, Indonesian, Malay
Arabic alternate transcription of Nasiba as well as the Indonesian and Malay form.
Nasibat f Lezgin
Lezgin feminine form of Nasib.
Nasibeh f Persian
Either a Persian feminine form of Nasib or from Arabic نصيب (naṣīb) meaning "fate, luck, chance"
Nasiha f Arabic, Bosnian
Feminine form of Nasih.
Nasihah f Arabic, Malay
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصحة or نصيحة (see Nasiha), as well as the Malay form.
Nasihin m Indonesian
From Arabic ناصحين (nāṣiḥīn), the plural of ناصح (nāṣiḥ) meaning "adviser, counselor".
Nasimah f Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic نسيمة (see Nasima), as well as a Malay and Indonesian variant.
Nasimullah m Arabic, Afghan
The first element of this name is likely derived from either the Arabic noun نَسِيم‎ (nasim) meaning "breeze" (see Nasim) or from the Arabic noun نَاظِم‎ (nazim) meaning "organizer" (see Nazim)... [more]
Nəsir m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Nasir.
Nasır m Kazakh
Kazakh form of Nasir.
Nasirah f Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصرة/نصيرة (see Nasira), as well as a Malay and Indonesian variant.
Nasir al-Din m Arabic
Means "supporter of the faith" from Arabic ناصر/نصير (nasir) meaning "helper, supporter" and دين (dīn) meaning "religion, faith".
Nasirbek m Kazakh (Rare), Kyrgyz (Rare), Uzbek (Rare)
Combination of Nasir with the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master".... [more]
Nasirdin m Kyrgyz
Kyrgyz form of Nasir al-Din.
Nasiriyah f English (Rare), Arabic
From the city of Nasiriyah in southern Iraq. The city was founded in the 1870s and named after a local sheikh named Nasir.
Nasiruddin m Arabic, Bengali, Malay
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصر الدين/نصیر الدین (see Nasir al-Din), as well as the Bengali and Malay form.
Nasirudin m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Nasir al-Din.
Naska f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Nasko.
Näskk f Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Anastasia.
Nasko m Bulgarian
Dialectal variant of Atanas.
Näskonung m Swedish (Archaic)
Modern transcription of Old Swedish Næskonung (see Næskunungr).
Nasława f Polish (Archaic)
Feminine form of Nasław.
Nasly f Spanish (Latin American)
Said to have originated as a Hispanic corruption of the Slavic name Nadia 1. This name is most often used in Colombia.
Nason m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Nason.
Nasos m Greek
Either a diminutive of Athanasios or Anastasios.
Nasouh m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic نصوح (see Nasuh).
Nasoula f Greek
Diminutive of Athanasia.
Nəsrəddin m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Nasir al-Din.
Nasr al-Din m Arabic
Means "victory of the religion" from Arabic نصر (naṣr) meaning "triumph, victory" combined with دين (dīn) meaning "religion, faith".
Nasrallah m Persian, Arabic
Persian form of Nasrullah, as well as an Arabic alternate transcription.
Nasrat m Afghan
Afghani form of Nusrat.
Nasratullah m Arabic
Derived from the Arabic noun nasrah meaning "help, aid, assistance" (see Nasrat and compare Nasser) combined with the Arabic noun الله (Allah) meaning "God" (see Allah).... [more]
Nasreddine m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic نصر الدين (see Nasr al-Din) chiefly used in North Africa.
Nasreena f Dhivehi
Dhivehi form of Nasrin.
Nasrizal m Indonesian
Combination of Nasri and the masculine suffix -zal.
Nasrodin m Filipino, Maguindanao, Indonesian
Maguindanao and Indonesian form of Nasir al-Din.
Nasrollah m Persian
Persian form of Nasrullah. Known Iranian bearers of this name include the renowned photographer Nasrollah Kasraian (b. 1944), the famous poet Nasrollah Mardani (1947-2003) and the philosopher Nasrollah Pourjavady (b... [more]
Nasruddin m Arabic, Indonesian, Malay, Dari Persian
Alternate transcription of Arabic نصر الدين (see Nasr al-Din), as well as an Indonesian, Malay and Dari Persian variant.
Nasrudin m Indonesian, Malay, Maguindanao
Indonesian, Malay and Maguindanao variant of Nasr al-Din.
Nasrul m Arabic, Indonesian, Malay
First part of compound Arabic names beginning with نصر ال (Nasr al) meaning "victory of the" (such as Nasrullah).
Nəsrulla m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Nasrullah.
Nasrullah m Arabic, Urdu, Indonesian, Malay
Means "victory of Allah" from Arabic نصر (nasr) meaning "victory, triumph" combined with الله (Allah). Known bearers of this name include the Afghan crown prince Nasrullah Khan (1874–1920) and the Pakistani politician Nasrullah Khan Khattak (1923-2009).
Nasrullo m Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Nasrullah.
Nassaaq m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Navssâĸ.
Nasseem m & f Persian
Persian form of Nasim.
Nassef m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصف (see Nasif).
Nassera f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi variant of Nasira (chiefly Algerian).
Nassif m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصيف (see Nasif).
Nassima f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Nasima chiefly used in Northern Africa.
Nassir m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ناصر (see Nasir).
Nassira f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant of Nasira (chiefly Algerian and Moroccan).
Nàssiu m Sardinian
Short form of Innàssiu.
Nassoole f Sidamo
Feminine form of Nassool-a.
Nasťa f Czech (Rare), Slovak
Czech diminutive of Anastázie and Slovak diminutive of Anastázia. While Czech Nasťa is occasionally used as a given name in its own right, Slovak Nasťa is strictly used as a diminutive.
Nasta f Mordvin
Mordvin form of Anastasia.
Nasta f Romanian, Latvian (Archaic), Slovene
Romanian short form of Anastasia, Latvian short form of Anastasija and Slovene short form of Anastazija.
Nastasgia f Corsican
Corsican form of Anastasia.
Nastasie f French (Archaic), Louisiana Creole (Archaic), Literature
Vernacular truncated form of Anastasie (compare Nastasia) found in the Poitou-Charentes region of France, this name also made its way to Louisiana... [more]
Nastasija f Slovene
Slovene cognate of Nastasia.
Nastasio m Aragonese
Truncated form of Anastasio.