Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which an editor of the name is Frollein Gladys.
gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Holland f & m English (American, Rare), Romani (Archaic)
From the name of geographic places called Holland 1, or transferred usage of the surname Holland 1.
Hollandine f Dutch (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from the place name Holland 1, part of the Netherlands. In the case of Louise Hollandine of the Palatinate, the name was given to her because she was born in Dutch exile and the States General took over the sponsorship.
Hólmdís f Icelandic
Younger form of Holmdís.
HolmR m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse holmr "small island".
Holy f Malagasy
Derived from Malagasy oly "curly; curly hair".
Homère m French (Rare)
French form of Homer.
Homero m Galician (Rare), Spanish (Latin American), Portuguese (Brazilian)
Galician, Spanish and Portuguese form of Homer.
Hommy m Manx (Archaic)
Aspirated form of Tommy mimicking the Manx vocative case.
Honcia f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Hone m Maori
Maori form of John. Hone Tūwhare (21 October 1922 – 16 January 2008) was a noted Māori New Zealand poet.
Honesta f Medieval Italian
Derived from Latin honesta "distinguished, reputable; respected, honorable".
Honesto m Galician
Galician form of Honestus.
Honeyblossom f Obscure (Modern)
This name was perhaps coined by television presenter Paula Yates and musician Bob Geldof for their daughter Peaches Honeyblossom Geldof (1989-), from a combination of the names Honey and Blossom.
Honia f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Honka f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Honnys m Vilamovian
Variant of Hannys.
Honóra f Hungarian (Archaic)
Contracted form of Honória.
Honorát m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Honoratus.
Honorat m Catalan (Rare), French (Rare), Polish
Catalan, French, and Polish form of Honoratus.
Honoráta f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Honorata.
Honoratka f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Honorátusz m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Honoratus.
Honorcia f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Honória f Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Honoria.
Honorino m Galician
Galician form of Honorinus.
Honorio m Spanish (Rare), Galician (Rare)
Galician and Spanish form of Honorius.
Honóriusz m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Honorius.
Honoriusz m Polish
Polish form of Honorius.
Hònorôt m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Honoratus.
Honory m Polish
Variant of Honoriusz.
Honoryna f Polish
Polish form of Honorine.
Honys m Vilamovian
Variant of Honnys.
Hookey m Romani (Archaic)
Either a transferred use of the surname Hookey or a corruption of Montague.
Hopper m Alsatian (Archaic)
Vernacular diminutive of Joseph.
Horacia f Spanish (Rare)
Spanish form of Horatia.
Horacjusz m Polish
Polish form of Horatius.
Horacy m Polish
Polish form of Horatius.
Horalia f Spanish (Mexican, Rare)
Possibly a variant of Oralia.
Horcia f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Hori m Maori
Maori form of George.
Horică m Romanian
Diminutive of Horia and Horea.
Horisław m Sorbian
Sorbian cognate of Hořeslav.
Horka f Polish
Diminutive of Honorata.
Horsa m Judeo-Catalan (Archaic), Medieval Jewish
Of uncertain origin and meaning. Current theories include an adaption of Hebrew Hoshaya and a variant of Catalan Ursí (via the variant Ors).
Horta f Sorbian (Archaic)
Lower Sorbian variant of Orta.
Hortenzia f Hungarian, Slovak (Rare)
Hungarian and Slovak form of Hortensia.
Hosai f Pashto
Means "deer" in Pashto.
Hosegħa m Maltese
Maltese form of Hosea.
Hostaizka f Basque (Modern)
Derived from Basque hostaizka "daisy", this name is occasionally considered a Basque equivalent of Margarita and Marguerite.
Houbêrt m Walloon
Walloon form of Hubert.
Houbert m Walloon
Walloon form of Hubert.
Houde f Medieval French
Medieval French cognate of Otta.
Housse f Jèrriais (Modern, Rare)
Derived from Jèrriais housse "holly" (ultimately from Old French hous). This is a newly coined name, intened as a Jèrriais equivalent of Holly.
Howel m Cornish, Breton
Cornish cognate of Hywel and Breton variant of Hoel. Howel was the last Cornish king .
Hożanka f Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish diminutive of Ożanna.
Hrach m Armenian
Short form of Hrachya.
Hranimir m Bulgarian, Croatian (Rare)
Derived from Slavic elements hrani "protect, defend" and mir meaning "peace". Cognate of Branimir.
Hripsime f Armenian, History (Ecclesiastical)
Rhipsime, sometimes called Hripsime, Ripsime, Ripsima or Arsema (died c. 290) was a martyr of Roman origin; she and her companions in martyrdom are venerated as the first Christian martyrs of Armenia.
Hrisa f Greek
Variant transliteration of Χρύσα (see Chrysa).
Hrista f Bulgarian
Short form of Hristina.
Hristian m Bulgarian
Bulgarian form of Christian.
Hristomira f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Hristomir.
Hrjehor m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Gregor.
Hrothrekr m Old Norse
Old Norse cognate of Roderick.
Hryhir m Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Gregory.
Hryhory m Ukrainian
Variant transcription of Hryhoriy.
Hrystyna f Ukrainian
Variant transcription of Khrystyna.
Hualit m Judeo-Spanish (Archaic)
Judeo-Spanish form of Arabic Walid.
Huana f Welsh (Rare)
Derived from Welsh huan "sun".
Hùbert m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Hubert.
Hubèrt m Jèrriais
Jèrriais form of Hubert.
Hùberta f Kashubian
Feminine form of Hùbert.
Hubertine f Dutch, French (Rare), French (Belgian), Flemish, German (Archaic)
French form of Hubertina. A known bearer of this name was the French feminist Hubertine Auclert.
Huc m Gascon
Gascon form of Hugo.
Hüda f Turkish
Turkish form of Huda.
Hudria f Medieval French
Recorded in 16th-century French-speaking Switzerland.
Huertas f & m Spanish
It means "orchards" in Spanish. This was the name of a Muslim converted to Catholicism. As he was given a fertile plot of land he chose this name to be known. This name is normally used by females as "huertas" is grammaticaly feminine.
Hug m Medieval German
Medieval German form of Hugo.
Hugen m Manx (Archaic)
Diminutive of Hugh which was was widely used as an Anglicization of Manx Ae and Aedan.
Hughack m Scots
Diminutive of Hugh.
Hughina f Scottish (Rare)
Feminine form of Hugh.
Hùgò m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Hugo.
Hugó m Icelandic (Modern, Rare), Hungarian (Rare)
Icelandic variant of Húgó and Hungarian form of Hugo.
Hugon m Polish (Rare)
Polish variant of Hugo created on the basis of the Latin declination.
Hugona f Polish (Archaic)
Feminine form of Hugon.
Huguelin m Medieval French
Double diminutive of Hugues.
Hùisdean m Scottish Gaelic
Variant of Ùisdean. This name used to be Anglicized as the etymologically unrelated Hugh.
Huko m Estonian
Variant of Hugo.
Hukupapa f & m Maori (Rare)
Means "frost" in Maori.
Hulga f Literature
Hulga Hopewell is a character in Flannery O'Connor's Good Country People.
Hullah f Medieval Arabic
Means "dress, garment" in Arabic.
Humbelina f Polish (Rare), Medieval French
Feminine form of Humbelin, which in turn is a double diminutive of Humbert. Folk etymology connects it to Latin umbria meaning "shadow"... [more]
Humble m & f English (Rare), English (Puritan)
From an English surname Humble or from the word humble, from Middle English (h)umble, humel meaning "humble, meek".... [more]
Humfra m Cornish (Rare)
Cornish form of Humphrey.
Humildad f Spanish
From Spanish humildad meaning "humility, humbleness," taken from the title of the Virgin Mary, La Virgen de la Humildad, meaning "The Virgin of the Humility."
Humility f English (Puritan), History (Ecclesiastical, Anglicized)
English form of Humilitas, or directly from the English word humility, which is ultimately from Latin humilitas "lowness" (in Church Latin "humbleness; meekness").
Humla f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Directly taken from Swedish humla "bumblebee".
Hunna f History (Ecclesiastical)
Feminine form of Huno. Saint Hunna (died ca. 679) is a French saint who devoted herself to serving the poor women of Strasbourg, France. Because she undertook to do the washing for her needy neighbors, she was nicknamed by her contemporaries "The Holy Washerwoman".
Hunold m German (Rare, Archaic), Medieval Polish
Formed from the two Germanic name elements hun "bear cub" and walt "to rule".
Hunorka f Hungarian
Feminine form of Hunor.
Hunydd f Medieval Welsh
Old Welsh name of uncertain derivation, possibly from Welsh hun "sleep" or huan "sun". It was the name of a sweetheart of the 12th-century poet and soldier Hywel ap Owain.
Huon m Medieval Breton
Breton cognate of Hugh.
Huong f Vietnamese (Expatriate)
Variant of Hương or Hường used outside of Vietnam among people of Vietnamese descent.
Hurban m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Urban.
Hurley m English
Transferred use of the surname Hurley.
Hürriyet f & m Turkish
Means "freedom, liberty" in Turkish.
Huston m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Huston.
Huwcyn m Welsh
Diminutive of Huw.
Hvönn f Icelandic (Rare)
From the Icelandic name for a type of flower (species Angelica archangelica).
Hwlcyn m Medieval Welsh
Diminutive of Hywel.
Hydajet m Albanian
Albanian form of Hüdayet.
Hyde m English (Rare)
From the English surname Hyde. Fictional bearers of the surname include the criminal Edward Hyde from Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novella Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Steven Hyde, known simply as Hyde, a character played by Danny Masterson on the American television sitcom That '70s Show (1998-2006).
Hygin m History (Ecclesiastical), Polish (Rare)
French, Polish and Romanian form of Hyginus.
Hyjdla f Silesian
Variant of Hajdla.
Hyjnor m Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian hyjnor "divine, godly" and, figuratively, "miraculous, marvelous; extraordinary".
Hykka m Cornish (Archaic)
Cornish diminutive of Richard.
Hync m Sorbian
Lower Sorbian cognate of Hinc.
Hyniek m Silesian
Silesian form of Heniek.
Hynki m Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Henry.
Hypolith m German (Bessarabian)
Bessarabian German form of Hippolytos.
Hysni m Albanian
Albanian form of Husni.
Hysnije f Albanian
Albanian form of Hüsniye.
Hywyn m Welsh (Rare)
Diminutive of Hywel. A notable bearer of this name was Saint Hywyn (d. 516) who founded Aberdaron in Gwynedd, Wales and was a patron of churches in Western England.
Ia f History (Ecclesiastical)
Of unknown origin and meaning. Saint Ia was a 5th-century Cornish virgin martyr, an Irish princess, according to popular tradition, who travelled to Cornwall as a missionary and was martyred on the River Hayle under Tudur Mawr, ruler of Penwith... [more]
Iacint m Provençal
Provençal form of Hyacinthus.
Iacov m Moldovan
Variant of Iacob.
Iagu m Sardinian
Variant of Giagu.
Iàita f Sicilian
Variant of Jàita.
Iana f Georgian
Georgian form of Jane.
Iana m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Ian.
Iana f Scottish (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Ian.
Ianeta f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Янета (see Janeta).
Iang f Chin
Means "innocent; pure; graceful" in Chin.
Ianis m Romanian
Either a diminutive of Ioan or a borrowing of Yanis.
Ianna f Greek
Alternate transcription of Greek Γιάννα (see Gianna).
Iantumaros m Gaulish
Derived from Proto-Celtic *yantu "zeal, jealousy" and *māros "great".
Iaquinto m Medieval Italian
Medieval Italian form of Latin Hyacinthus and Greek Hyakinthos and earlier form of Giacinto.
Iasmin m Romanian (Rare)
Masculine form of Iasmina.
Iasón m Irish
Biblical Irish form of the name Jason, which appears in both The Acts and Romans in the Irish language bible.
Ibadete f Albanian
Feminine form of Ibadet.
Ibaia f Basque (Modern)
Feminine form of Ibai.
Ibba f Swedish (Rare)
Younger form of Ybba.
Ibbot f Manx, Medieval English
Manx diminutive of Isabel.
Ibby f English
Diminutive of Isabel and its variants.
Iberê m Brazilian, Tupi
Originally a diminutive of Itiberê, which is said to be derived from Tupi y "water; river" and tiri'ri "to drag oneself" and is thus commonly interpreted as "creeping river".
Ibi m Ancient Egyptian
The ancient Egyptian noble Ibi (sometime transliterated as Aba or Abe) was chief steward of the God's Wife of Amun, Nitocris I, during the reign of the 26th Dynasty pharaoh Psamtik I.
Ibolka f Slovene
Slovene adoption of Ibolya.
Ibolyka f Hungarian
Diminutive of Ibolya.
Ibone f Basque (Modern)
Coined by Sabino Arana Goiri and Koldo Elizalde as a Basque form of Yvonne.
Iboniamasiboniamanoro m Literature
One of the main characters in the Ibonia, an epic poem that has been told in various forms across the island of Madagascar for at least several hundred years.
Iboya f Dutch
Allegedly derived from Hungarian Ibolya.
Ibrány m Medieval Hungarian
Medieval Hungarian form of Ibrahim.
Ica f Romanian (Rare)
Short form of Vasilica.
Icaria f Italian
Feminine form of Icaro.
Ícaro m Spanish (Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare)
Spanish and Portuguese form of Ikaros (see Icarus).
Icel m Anglo-Saxon
Icel of Mercia was a 6th-century Anglish king in Britain.
Icelyn f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Apparently a combination of Ice and the popular name suffix lyn, perhaps influenced by Iceland.... [more]
Iceses f English (American, Modern)
Extremely rare variant of Isis, possibly influenced by the English word ice.
Ichelle f Dutch (Rare)
Meaning uncertain. It might possibly be an invented name, in which case it was most likely inspired by French feminine names that end in -ichelle, such as Michelle and Richelle... [more]
Icía f Galician
Variant of Cecía.
Icilia f Italian (Rare)
Feminine form of Icilio.
Icuța f Romanian (Rare)
Diminutive of Ica.
Ída f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Ida.
Ida f Sardinian
Both a borrowing of the Italian name and a short form of Vitalia via the short form Fida.
Ida f Irish (Anglicized)
Anglicized form of Íde.
Ida m East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of Idde recorded as a given name in East Frisia in the 14th century. In East Frisia masculine names ending in -a stopped getting used around the 15th century... [more]
Idaira f Spanish (Modern), Spanish (Canarian)
This was allegedly the name of a Guanche princess from the Canarian island of La Palma. It has perhaps been popularized in the Spanish-speaking world by the Canarian-born Spanish singer simply known as Idaira (1985-).
Idaja f Greek Mythology (Polonized)
Polish form of Idaea, not generally used as a given name.
Idalah f American (Rare, Archaic)
From an Old Testament place name, Yidh’alah in the original Hebrew, which means either "memorial of God" or "the hand of slander, cursing" or "snares".
Idali f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Of debated origin and meaning. Current theories include a combination of Ida and the popular name suffix -li (compare Novalie), a short form of Idalina and Idalisa as well as a short form of Idalia.
Idalina f English (Rare), Portuguese (Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian), Romanian (Rare)
Combination of Ida with the popular suffix -lina.
Idalma f Spanish (Latin American), Spanish (Caribbean), Portuguese (Brazilian)
Elaboration of Idalia, probably influenced by the word alma "soul".
Idäus m East Frisian
Variation of Idde recorded in East Frisia in the 19th and 20th century.
Idda m East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of Idde recorded in East Frisia in the 14th century.
Idéa f Louisiana Creole, Greek Mythology (Gallicized)
French form of Idaea. As a given name, it may be an elaboration of Ide (the French form of Ida).
Idelette f French (Rare), French (Belgian, Rare), Dutch (Rare)
French diminutive of either Ide or Idelinde. This name was borne by Idelette Calvin (ca. 1505-1549), the wife of the French theologian and reformer John Calvin (1509-1564).
Idelma f Italian
Of uncertain origin and meaning.
Idemay f Medieval English
Medieval English form of Old English *Idmæg.
Idica f Slovene
Diminutive of Ida.
Idil f Turkish
Turkish feminine name derived from idil "idyll".... [more]
Idina f English, Hebrew
Possibly related to Adina 1. Actress Idina Menzel is a well-known bearer.
Idit f Hebrew
Means "ground" or "soil" in Hebrew.
Idith f Hebrew
Variant transcription of Idit.
Idka f Polish
Diminutive of Ida.
Idnerth m Medieval Welsh
Derived from the Proto-Celtic *yowdos “judge" and *nerθ “strength, force".