Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the description contains the keywords touch or of or death.
gender
usage
keyword
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Lumen f Popular Culture
This is the name of a fictional character from the television series "Dexter".
Lumen f Filipino
Diminutive of Iluminada.
Lumena f Portuguese
Diminutive of Filomena.
Lumi f Filipino, Tagalog
From Tagalog lumi meaning "gentleness and softness of manners".
Lumiana f Albanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Lumian.
Lumiana f Obscure
Meaning unknown, perhaps an altered form of Luciana influenced by Latin lumen "light, source of light, daylight; distinguished person, glory". By some accounts, the American singer Lumidee Cedeño (1984-) was born Lumiana DeRosa.
Lumianna f Finnish (Modern)
Combination of Lumi and Anna. The name was first used in the 1990s.
Lumidee f English (Rare)
Meaning uncertain, possibly a contraction of Lumiana and Dee. This name is borne by American singer Lumidee Cedeño (1984-), simply known as Lumidee.
Lumikukka f Finnish (Modern)
A combination of Lumi, which means "snow", and Kukka, which means "flower". The name was first used in the 1970's.
Lumimuut f Minahasan
Meaning unknown. In the Minahasan mythology of Indonesia, she was the ancestor of the Minahasan people, alongside with her husband Toar.
Lumina f Finnish (Modern)
Elaboration of Lumi.
Luminessa f Obscure
From the English word luminescence, a derivative of Latin lumen "light" (from lux).
Luming f Filipino
Mainly a diminutive of Iluminada. This can also be used as a diminutive of Filomena, Paraluman, and other names containing a similar sound.
Luminosa f Spanish (Mexican), Italian (Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare)
Derived from the Latin adjective luminosus meaning "full of light, luminous". This was the name of a 5th-century saint from Pavia in Lombardy, Italy. This was also borne by a 6th-century Byzantine woman, the wife of the tribune Zemarchus... [more]
Lumíra f Czech
Feminine form of Lumír.
Lumisirkku f Folklore
Means "snow bunting (a type of bird)" in Finnish, composed of lumi "snow" (see Lumi) and sirkku "bunting" (referring to a bird of the genus Emberiza; see Sirkku)... [more]
Lumity f English (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the Spanish name and word Luz meaning light and the English name and word Amity meaning friend, which Lumity directly means friend of Light. ... [more]
Lumiya f Popular Culture, Literature
Lumiya proclaimed herself the Dark Lady of the Sith. She recruited and trained Jacen Solo, and was killed by Luke Skywalker.
Lumme f Estonian
Possibly derived from the illative singular form of lumi "snow".
Lümmeke f Low German (Rare, Archaic)
Low German and East Frisian short form of names containing the element liud- "people".
Lumnie f Albanian
Variant of Lumnije.
Lumturije f Albanian
Elaboration of Lumturi.
Lumyai f Thai
Alternate transcription of Lamyai.
Lúna f Icelandic
Icelandic variant of Luna.
Lunabeth f Filipino (Rare)
Combination of Luna and Beth.
Lunalilo f Hawaiian
One of Princess Kaiulani's (the people's princess) names.
Lunamaria f Popular Culture
Used for a character in the Japanese anime metaseries 'Mobile Suit Gundam SEED', first released in 2002. It was probably inspired by the similar-sounding phrase lunar maria "broad, dark areas of the moon" (Latin: Maria Lunae), ultimately from Latin luna "moon" (compare Luna "goddess of the moon") and mare "sea" (plural maria; applied to lunar features by Galileo and used thus in 17th-century Latin works... [more]
Lunar f & m English (Modern, Rare)
Simply from the English word lunar which means "pertaining to the moon, crescent-shaped", ultimately from Latin lunaris "of the moon" (via Old French lunaire).
Lunara f Kazakh (Rare)
Kazakh short form of Gulnara.
Lunardu m Corsican, Sicilian
Coriscan contracted form of Leunardu and Sicilian contracted form of Liunardu.
Lunaria f English (Rare), Brazilian (Rare), Filipino (Rare), Spanish (Latin American, Rare), Spanish (Mexican, Rare)
Means "moon-like" in Latin. Lunaria is a genus of flowering plants.
Lunarosa f English (American)
Combination of Luna and Rosa 1.
Lunarose f Filipino
Combination of Luna and Rose.
Lunasol f Spanish (Rare)
A combination of Luna and Sol 1.
Lunay f Obscure
Possibly an elaboration of Luna.
Lunći f Bosnian (Archaic)
Diminutive of Luna.
Lune f French (Modern, Rare), Dutch (Modern)
Derived from French lune "moon", making it a cognate of Luna.
Luneczka f Polish
Diminutive of Lunia.
Luneth m Popular Culture
Derived from the word Luna which is Latin for Moon.... [more]
Lunette f French (Archaic), English (Archaic)
Means "little moon" in Medieval French. It is derived from French lune "moon" combined with a diminutive suffix. So, in other words, one could say that this name is the diminutive form of Lune.
Lung m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 瓏 (lung) meaning "a kind of jade".
Lungtog m Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ལུང་རྟོགས (see Lungtok).
Luni f Judeo-Spanish
Diminutive of Luna.
Lunia f Polish
Diminutive of names beginning with Lu-, such as Lucyna, Luna, Łucja or Ludmiła.
Lunia f Kongo
Delicacy of taste
Luniao f Chinese
From the Chinese 璐 (lù) meaning "a type of jade" and 鸟 (niǎo) meaning "bird".
Lunika f Russian
Meaning: "A small piece of moon" or "gift"
Luning f Filipino
Mostly a diminutive of Leonila. This can also be a nickname for Leonora, Luna, and other names containing leon or lun.
Lunise f Haitian Creole
Possibly an invented name based on the sounds found in names such as Lucie and Denise. A known bearer is Haitian singer Lunise Morse of the band RAM, the wife of musician Richard Auguste Morse.
Lunita f Spanish
Spanish diminutive of Luna.
Lunka f Polish
Variant of Lunia.
Luno m Spanish
Masculine form of Luna.
Lunzi m German (Swiss)
Swiss German form of Leontius, of chiefly historical usage, as well as a general name for a person in various children's rhymes.
Luoshen f Chinese Mythology, Literature
Means "goddess of the Luo River" in Chinese, from the river name 洛 (Luò) and 神 (shén) meaning "god, deity, spirit". This is the name of a well-known figure in Chinese literature and folklore... [more]
Luowei m Chinese
From Chinese 罗 (luó) meaning "net, gauze", and also referring to the minor ancient state of Luo combined with 巍 (wēi) meaning "high, lofty, towering". Other character combinations are possible as well.
Luoyan f Chinese
From the Chinese 罗 (luó) meaning "net, gauze" and 琰 (yǎn) meaning "jewel, gem, glitter of gems".
Lup m Bulgarian (Archaic), Medieval Romanian, Russian (Archaic), Serbian (Archaic)
Bulgarian, Romanian, Russian and Serbian form of Lupus (see Loup).
Lupa f Late Roman, Medieval Romanian, Esperanto
Feminine form of Lupus (Late Roman) and Lup (Medieval Romanian).... [more]
Lupambulus m Medieval Latin
Medieval Latin translation of Wolfgang, derived from Latin lupus "wolf" and ambulare "to walk", found in a Latin gloss by Arnoldus Emmeramensis (Arnold of Saint Emmeram).
Lupatus m Late Roman
Derivative of Latin lupus, meaning "wolf".
Lupe m Georgian (Archaic)
Georgian form of Lupus (see Loup).
Lupelele f Samoan
Derived from the Samoan lupe meaning a kind of pigeon, and lele meaning "flit, fly".
Luperc m History (Ecclesiastical)
Catalan and French form of Lupercus.
Lupercio m Portuguese, Spanish
Portuguese and Spanish form of Lupercius and variant of Luperco.
Luperco m Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish form of Lupercus.
Lupercus m Roman Mythology (?), Ancient Roman, History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from Latin lupus meaning "wolf". According to the 2nd-century historian Justin, Lupercus was a pastoral deity invoked to protect fertility, in whose honour were celebrated the Lupercalia rites on February 15, in the Lupercal (a cave on the Palatine Hill where tradition held that Romulus and Remus were suckled by the she-wolf)... [more]
Luperkus m Polish
Polish form of Lupercus.
Lupesina f Samoan
Derived from lupe meaning a kind of pigeon and sina meaning "white, silver, grey".
Lupicina f Spanish (Rare, Archaic)
Feminine form of Lupicino and variant of Lupicinia.
Lupicínio m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Lupicinio. A bearer of this name was Brazilian composer Lupicínio Rodrigues (1914-1974).
Lupicinio m Spanish
Variant form of Lupicino.
Lupicino m Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
Italian, Spanish and Portuguese form of Lupicinus.
Lupicinus m History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from Latin lupus "wolf". A known bearer of this name was Lupicinus of Lyon, a saint from the 5th century AD.
Lupilla f Spanish
Diminutive of Guadalupe.
Lupillo m Spanish
Diminutive of Guadalupe.
Lupin m English (Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Lupin. Fictional bearers of the surname are Arsène Lupin, a gentleman thief turned detective extraordinaire in novels by French writer Maurice Leblanc (introduced in 1905), and Remus Lupin, a werewolf in the Harry Potter book series written by J. K. Rowling (introduced in 1999).
Lupina f Spanish (Mexican)
In most cases, a diminutive of Guadalupe. ... [more]
Lupinchen f Popular Culture, German (Modern, Rare)
German diminutive of Lupine. The name is borne by a feminine Wolf in the German Comic Series 'Fix und Foxi'.
Lupine f English
Variant of Lupin, derived from the species Lupinus or Lupine.
Lupinex m Popular Culture
Based on Latin lupinus meaning "of the wolf" (see Loup). This is the name of a werewolf in the Japanese manga series Beyblade, written and illustrated by Takao Aoki.
Luping f Filipino, Tagalog
Diminutive of Guadalupe.
Lupito m Spanish
Diminutive of Guadalupe.
Lupo m Italian, Spanish, Esperanto
Italian and Esperanto form of Lupus and Spanish variant of Lope.
Lupp m Russian (Archaic)
Russian form of Louppos, which is one of the Greek forms of Lupus (see Loup).... [more]
Lupu m Corsican (Archaic)
Corsican form of Loup as well as a direct derivation from Corsican lupu "wolf" and thus ultimately a cognate of Loup.
Lupula f Late Roman
Feminine form of Lupulus. A known bearer of this name was Arria Lupula, one of the half-sisters of the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius (86-161).
Lupy f Literature
A character from The Borrowers, a book by Mary Norton, possibly a variant of Russian Lyuba.
Luqa m Maltese
Maltese form of Luke.
Luqiang f Chinese
From the Chinese 璐 (lù), a kind of jade, and 蔷 (qiáng) meaning "rose".
Luqiao f Chinese
From the Chinese 璐 (lù) meaning "a type of jade" and 俏 (qiào) meaning "like, similar, resemble".
Luqman m Arabic, Urdu, Malay, Indonesian
Meaning uncertain. This is the name of a figure mentioned several times in the Quran, described as a sage who was bestowed with wisdom by God. He is also the namesake of the 31st chapter of the Quran (surah Luqman).
Luqmonoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek luqmon meaning "sage" or in honour of Luqmon or Luqmoni hakim, a sage regarded as the father of medicine, followed by oy meaning "moon".
Luque m Brazilian (Rare)
Probably a phonetic spelling of Luke.
Luquet m Provençal
Diminutive of Lu 5.
Lura f English (American)
Possibly a form of Laura.
Luram m Mormon
Nephite soldier, one of three "choice men" (Moroni 9) slain in battle (c. AD 375)
Luran m & f Chinese
Combination of the names Lu and Ran.
Lurana f English (American, Archaic)
Possibly an early American alteration of Lorena 2. This name was borne by Lurana W. Sheldon (1862-1945), an author and newspaper editor who fought for women's legal right to vote in the United States.
Luranah f English (American, Archaic)
Variant of Lurana. This was borne by English opera singer Luranah Aldridge (1860-1932). She was a daughter of American-born English actor Ira Aldridge and was named in honour of his mother, Luranah.
Lurch m Popular Culture
This was the name of the butler on The Addams Family. A lurch is a sudden, uncontrolled movement.
Lurchi m Popular Culture
Lurchi started is life as a mascot of the German shoe selling company Salamander. He is the hero of more than 100 adventures in the series 'Luchis Abenteuer' ("Lurchi's adventures") distributed as booklets to children buying shoes... [more]
Luredda f Sicilian
Variant of Loredda.
Luregn m Romansh
Romansh form of Laurence 1, traditionally found in the Surselva region and in central Grisons.
Lurena f Sicilian, English (American, Archaic)
Sicilian form of Lorena 1 and American variant of Lurana.
Lureng m Romansh
Variant of Lurench.
Lurenz m Romansh
Romansh form of Laurence 1.
Lurenzu m Corsican, Sicilian
Corsican and Sicilian form of Laurence 1.
Luretta f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Loretta.
Lurian f & m Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare)
Portuguese variant of the names Lauriano and Lauriana, from the english name Lorraine.
Lurilla f American (Rare, Archaic)
Possibly an elaboration of Lura by way of combining it with the name suffix -illa.
Lurine f English (American, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Lura or a variant of Laurine or Lorine.
Lurintg m Romansh
Romansh form of Laurence 1, traditionally found in central Grisons.
Lurlean f African American (Rare)
Variant of Lurline. A famous bearer of this name was American singer Lurlean Hunter.
Lurleen f American
Variant of Lurline.
Lurlie f English (American, Archaic)
Perhaps a diminutive of Lurline.
Lurline f English, Jamaican Patois, Theatre
English poetic variant of Lorelei. William Vincent Wallace used it for the title character, a nymph of the Rhine River, in his opera Lurline (first performed 1860).
Lurma f African American (Americanized)
Lurma is an American-English alternate spelling of Lerma, and/ or a transferred use of surname Lurma.
Lurra f Basque Mythology
Variant of Lur. A feminine, positive entity that relates to fecundity. Unlimited in all directions, she includes the stars, moon and sun inside her borders. The Earth is alive: she gives birth to the mountains, that grow and rise towards the sky, whilst other places subside... [more]
Lurtz m Popular Culture
This is the name of an original character in Peter Jackson's film adaptation of J. R. R. Tolkien's 'The Lord of the Rings', created by Jackson or his co-writers from the style of Tolkien's Orkish language... [more]
Lûsa f Greenlandic
Variant of Rûsa.
Lusa f Inuit, Literature
Used by Erin Hunter in the Seekers series of novels. It means, "Midnight".
Lusadzin f Armenian
Western Armenian transcription of Lusatsin.
Luscha f Dutch
Dutch variant of Lusja.
Lusciandro m Ligurian
Ligurian form of Alexander.
Luscinia f English (Rare), Roman Mythology
Derived from Latin luscinia "nightingale". This was an epithet of the Roman goddess Minerva. As an English name, it has been used sparingly since the 19th century.
Luscious f & m African American (Rare), South African
Variant of Lucius (phonetically identical).
Luscrista f Obscure
Probably a combination of Luz and Cristina.
Luscus m Ancient Roman
Roman cognomen which was derived from the Latin adjective luscus meaning "one-eyed, half blind".... [more]
Lushanya f Chickasaw
Possibly means "songbird" in Chickasaw, perhaps from the Chickasaw taloowa 'sing, chanter' and foshi 'bird'.... [more]
Lushawn f & m African American (Modern, Rare)
Variant of LaShawn. In some cases it may be a combination of Lu or Lou with the name Shawn.
Lushcha f Khanty, Mansi
Khanty and Mansi form of Lyudmila.
Lushi f Chinese
Combination of the names Lu and Shi, can be also a form of Lucy or Lucie.
Lusi f Old Swedish, Swedish (Archaic)
Vernacular form of Lucia.
Lusi f Polynesian
Polynesian form of Lucy.
Lusi m & f Azerbaijani
Variation of Lucius and Lucie.
Łusia f Polish, Venetian
Polish diminutive of Łucja and Venetian form of Lucia.
Lúsía f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Lucia.
Lùsia f Venetian
Variant of Łusia.
Lüsìa f Emilian-Romagnol
Emilian-Romangnol form of Lucia.
Lûsîa f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Lucia.
Lusia f Breton, Faroese, Finnish, English (British, Rare)
Breton, Finnish and Faroese form and English variant of Lucia.
Lusia f Polish
Usually a diminutive of names beginning with Lu- such as Lucyna, Lucja/Łucja or Ludmiła... [more]
Lusian m Breton (Rare)
Breton form of Lucian.
Lusiana f Breton (Rare, Archaic), English (Modern, Rare)
Breton feminine form of Lusian and English variant of Luciana.
Lusie f Medieval Dutch
Medieval Dutch variant of Lucia.
Lusila f Albanian
Albanian form of Lucille.
Lusilla f Obscure
Variant of Lucilla.
Lúsinda f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Lucinda.
Lusitania f English (Rare, Archaic), South American (Rare)
The etymology of this name is widely debated. However, the name may be of Celtic origin: Lus and Tanus, "tribe of Lusus", connecting the name with the personal Celtic name Luso and with the god Lugh.
Lusja f Russian, German (Rare)
Variant transcription of Lusya.
Łuśka f Polish
Diminutive of Łucja.
Luso f Armenian
Diminutive form of Lusine.
Luss f & m Luxembourgish (Archaic)
Vernacular short form of Luzia, Lucie as well as Luzian and Lucien.
Lussa f Swedish (Archaic), Old Swedish
Dialectal variant of Lucia recorded in Jämtland.
Lusse f Swedish (Archaic)
Vernacular form of Lucia.
Lussi f Old Swedish
Probably from the Latin lux meaning "light". ... [more]
Lussurgiu m Sardinian
Sardinian form of Lussorio.
Luster m American (Rare, Archaic)
German-American name meaning "cheerful" due to the original German connotation of Lust- having a platonic meaning of "delight" or "joy".
Lusya f Russian
Russian variant of Luchiya and diminutive of Lyudmila.
Lüszi f Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Lucy.
Lut m Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
Arabic form of Lot 1, used in the Quran.
Lutaci m Catalan
Catalan form of Lutatius.
Lutácio m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Lutatius.
Lutacio m Spanish
Spanish form of Lutatius.
Lutacjusz m Polish
Polish form of Lutatius.
Lutana f Indigenous Australian
Means "the moon" in the Palawa language of Tasmania. There is a suburb of Hobart with this name. A famous namesake is Lutana Spotswood, a language worker who gave a eulogy in Palawa at the funeral of a Tasmanian premier.
Lutao m & f Chinese
Combination of the names Lu and Tao.
Lutatius m Ancient Roman
From the Roman nomen gentile Lutatius, which is also found spelled as Luctatius. Its etymology is a little bit uncertain, but it is probably derived from the Latin noun luctatio meaning "a wrestling" as well as "struggle, contest, fight", which itself is ultimately derived from the Latin verb luctor meaning "to wrestle, to struggle, to fight"... [more]
Lutatsiy m Russian
Russian form of Lutatius.
Lutazio m Italian
Italian form of Lutatius.
Lutchmee f Mauritian Creole
Form of Lakshmi chiefly used in Mauritius.
Lute m English (Rare)
Diminutive of Luther.
Lúter m Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic variant of Luther.
Luterio m Aragonese
Aragonese form of Eleutherios.
Lutero m Spanish (Rare), Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese form of Luther.
Lutetia f Late Roman, Gaulish
Lutetia was the name of a Gallic city, now known as Paris, the capital of France. The etymology of Lutetia is unclear though. It was referred to as Λουκοτοκία (Loukotokía) by Strabon and Λευκοτεκία (Leukotekía) by Ptolemeus... [more]
Lutf Allah m Arabic
Means "kindness of Allah" from Arabic لطف (luṭf) meaning "kindness, gentleness, graciousness" combined with الله (Allah).
Lutfia f Arabic, Indonesian
Feminine form of Lutfi.
Lutfiah f Arabic, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic لطفية (see Lutfia), as well as an Indonesian variant.
Lutfie m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfi.
Lutfiya f Arabic, Tajik, Uzbek
Arabic alternate transcription of Lutfiyah as well as the Tajik and Uzbek form.
Lutfiyah f Arabic, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic لطفية (see Lutfia), as well as an Indonesian variant.
Lutfulla m Uzbek
Uzbek form of Lutf Allah.
Lütfullah m Turkish
Turkish form of Lutf Allah.
Lutfullah m Arabic, Pashto
Alternate transcription of Arabic لطف الله (see Lutf Allah), as well as the usual Pashto form.
Lutfullo m Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Lutfullah.
Lutf ur-Rahman m Arabic, Indian (Muslim), Bengali
From means "kindness of the merciful" from Arabic لطف (lutf) meaning "kindness, friendliness" and الرحْمن (raḥman) meaning "merciful".
Lutgart f Flemish
Flemish form of Luitgard.
Lutger m Dutch
Dutch form of Ludger.
Luthais m Scottish Gaelic
Gaelic form of Louis.
Luthe m Literature
Name of a character in Robin McKinley's The Hero and the Crown.
Lúther m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Luther.
Luthera f Obscure
Feminine form of Luther.
Lutherus m Medieval German (Latinized)
Probably a variant of Leuthar (see Luther)
Luthfi m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfi.
Luthfia f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfia.
Luthfiah f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfia.
Luthfie m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfi.
Luthfiya f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfia.
Luthfiyah f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Lutfia.
Lúthien f Literature
Means "daughter of flowers" in a Beleriandic dialect of Sindarin. his was the real name of Tinúviel in J. R. R. Tolkien's novels.
Luðinn m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Loðinn.
Luthor m Literature
Possibly a spelling variant of Luther. In George R. R. Martin's fantasy series "A Song of Ice and Fire", Luthor Tyrell is the patriarch of House Tyrell during the later years of the Targaryen dynasty in Westeros.
Lúðvíka f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Ludwiga.
Luti f Nyakyusa
Nyakyusa form of Ruth 1.
Lutia f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Lydia.
Lutiant f Ojibwe
Lutiant LaVoy was an Ojibwe woman who worked as a nurse in Washington, D.C., during the 1918 pandemic. She was the only person in the United States with this name according to the 1910 census. Perhaps this is an Anglicized or Americanized version of a native Ojibwe name.
Lutie f English (Rare)
Possibly a feminine form of Luther (compare Lute) or a variant of Ludie.
Lutine f Folklore
The name of a type of female imp in French folklore, by extension meaning "the tormentress", derived from nuiton (probably altered to resemble luitier "to fight"), from netun (influenced by nuit "night"), itself ultimately from Neptune.
Lûtivik m Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Ludwig.
Lütje m Low German (Rare, Archaic)
Low German diminutive of Lude. It phonetically coincides with Low German lüttje "small; little" and Lüttje "the small one; the little one".
Lutje m East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of names with the name element liut.
Lütjen m Dutch
Dutch variant of Lütje.
Lûto m Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Ludo.
Lutobor m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic lut "fierce, severe, cruel, wild" and is etymologically related to Luty, the Polish name for the month of February (which is so named because of the fierce cold and frost during that time of year)... [more]
Lutochna f Polish
Diminutive of Lutosława.
Lutogniew m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic lut "fierce, severe, cruel, wild" and is etymologically related to Luty, the Polish name for the month of February (which is so named because of the fierce cold and frost during that time of year)... [more]
Lutomir m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic lut "fierce, severe, cruel, wild" and is etymologically related to Luty, the Polish name for the month of February (which is so named because of the fierce cold and frost during that time of year)... [more]
Lutosław m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic lut "fierce, severe, cruel, wild" and is etymologically related to Luty, the Polish name for the month of February (which is so named because of the fierce cold and frost during that time of year)... [more]
Lutpulla m Uyghur
Uyghur form of Lutfullah.
Lutricia f English
Possibly a variant of Latricia, a blend of the popular prefix La and Patricia.
Lutse m Greenlandic
Possibly a Greenlandic form of Lothar.
Lutseia f Medieval Baltic
Variant of Liucija, recorded in 15th-century Lithuania.
Lutsi m Azerbaijani
Variation of Lucius.
Lutsîa f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Lydia.
Lutsia f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Lydia.
Lutsilla f Russian
Russian form of Lucilla. Also compare Lukilla and Lyutsilla.
Lutsin m Russian (Rare)
Russian form of Lucinus. Also compare Lukin.
Lutsina f Russian
Russian form of Lucina. Also compare Lukina and Lyutsina.
Lutsiy m Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Lucius. Also compare Lukiy and Lyutsiy.
Lutsiya f Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Lucia. Also compare Lukiya and Lyutsiya.
Lutsko m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Lukyan.
Lutuś m Polish
Diminutive of Lucjan, Lucjusz or names beginning or containing lut-.
Lutxi f Basque
Basque equivalent of Lucie.
Luuc m Dutch (Rare)
Alternate spelling of Luuk.
Luui m Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Louis.
Luuissi m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Lûíse.
Luʻukia f Polynesian Mythology, Hawaiian (Rare)
Name of A legendary chiefess, sister of Kāwelu, daughter or wife of ʻOlopana.