Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which an editor of the name is Sofia.
gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Chophel m Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan ཆོས་འཕེལ (chos 'phel) meaning "flourishing dharma" or "spread of dharma".
Chrishelle f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Michelle, influenced by Chris.
Chung f & m Korean
Variant transcription of Jeong.
Chunzhen f & m Chinese
From Chinese 纯 (chún) meaning "pure, clean, simple" and 甄 (zhēn) meaning "examine, discern, distinguish" or 禎 (zhēn) meaning "lucky, auspicious"... [more]
Ciaran m English
Anglicized form of Ciarán.
Cider m English (American)
After the drink, Cider. Means, "strong drink"
Cielito f Spanish
Diminutive of Cielo.
Cilika f Croatian
Diminutive of Cecilija.
Çiñğiz m Tatar
Variant of Genghis.
Ciniod m Old Celtic
Variant of Cináed. ... [more]
Ciorgi m Sicilian
Variant of Giorgi.
Cipriana f Italian, Portuguese, Galician, Spanish, Romanian, Greek (Rare), Gascon, Provençal
Italian, Romanian, Portuguese, Galician, Spanish, Gascon and Provençal feminine form of Cyprianus (compare Cypriana).
Ćirila f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Ćiril.
Cirill m Hungarian
Hungarian form Cyril.
Cirilla f Italian (Rare), Hungarian (Rare)
Italian and Hungarian feminine form of Cyril.
Cirillu m Corsican, Sicilian
Corsican and Sicilian form of Cyril.
Cirmanu m Sicilian
Variant of Girmanu.
Citka f Slovene
Diminutive of Cita.
Claiborne m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Claiborne.... [more]
Clarabel f English
Variant of Claribel. This was the name of the fictional character Clarabel from 'The Railway Series' of children's books by the Rev. W. Awdry and the related 'Thomas & Friends' television series... [more]
Clarimonde f Literature
Variant of Claremonde. La Morte amoureuse (in English: "The Dead Woman in Love") is a short story written by Théophile Gautier and published in La Chronique de Paris in 1836... [more]
Clarina f Dutch, English (Rare)
Elaborated form of Clara. This name was borne by Clarina H. Nichols, a pioneer of the women's right movement in the nineteenth century.
Cleave m English
From an English origin meaning "cliff". Diminutive of Cleavon or a variant of Cleve. As an independent name can be transferred use of the surname Cleave... [more]
Cleavon m African American (Rare)
Meaning "cliff". Adaptation from names containing the element cleav with the suffix -on.
Climentina f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Clementina.
Cliodhna f Irish
Anglicized form of Clíodhna.
Cloélia f French (Rare)
French form of Cloelia.
Clóris f Portuguese (Rare)
Portuguese form of Chloris.
Clotildi f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Clotilde.
Clotile f Walloon
Walloon form of Clothilde.
Clydie f English (American)
Feminine form of Clyde.
Cobalt m English
From the metal or the shade of blue. Derived from German kobold, a type of house spirit. This in turn, has a few possible etymologies. One is that it come from Greek koba'los, meaning "rogue"... [more]
Cobi f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Coby.
Codin m Romanian
Diminutive of Constantin.
Codrina f Romanian
Feminine form of Codrin.
Codru m Romanian (Rare)
Derived from Romanian codru "wood, forest".
Coila f Literature
Coila was the muse of the poet Robert Burns, he created her as a poetic device for many of his poems. The name derives from the poetic name for the area of Kyle, Ayrshire, which itself is derived from the male names Coil, Coilus or Coel Hen, King of the Picts, who lived, ruled and died in the area.
Colga m Irish (Rare)
From Irish colg, meaning "thorn" or "sword".
Colinda f English (American, Rare)
Of unknown origin and meaning. Possibly created as a feminine form of Colin 2.
Collen m Medieval Welsh, History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from Middle Welsh collen "hazel", ultimately from Old Welsh coll. Collen was a 7th-century monk who gave his name to Llangollen.
Collen m South African
Either a variant of Colin 2 or a transferred use of the surname Collen.
Colline f English (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Collin, variant of Colleen or Coline.
Colm-cille m Irish
From Saint Colm-Cille (Saint Columba in English). Middle name of American-Australian actor and film director Mel Gibson.
Colonel m American (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Colonel or as a first name could be an attempt by parents to give their child a higher status.
Columbia m & f Spanish, English, Italian
The name Colombia comes from the name of Christopher Columbus (Spanish: Cristóbal Colón). It was conceived by the revolutionary Francisco de Miranda as a reference to all the New World, but especially to those territories and colonies under Spanish and Portuguese rule... [more]
Comus m Greek Mythology
Greek god of revelry, merrymaking, festivity, nocturnal dalliances... [more]
Conal m Irish
Variant of Conall.
Concettuzza f Sicilian
Diminutive of Concetta.
Connery m & f Irish (Anglicized), English (Modern)
Transferred use of the surname Connery.... [more]
Conny f & m Dutch, English, Swedish
Variant of Connie. In Sweden, it is primarily used as a masculine name and as a full name rather than a diminutive.
Conolly m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Conolly.
Consetta f English (Rare)
Probably a variant of Concetta.
Cooke m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Cooke. Cooke Maroney is an art dealer and the husband of American actress, Jennifer Lawrence.
Cooter m American (Rare)
Possibly from the surname Cooter originating in Sussex, England. The American nickname became widely known in the United States with the character Cooter Davenport on the television series 'The Dukes of Hazzard' (1979-1985)... [more]
Coralia f Romanian (Rare), Spanish, Galician, Italian (Rare)
Romanian, Italian, Galician and Spanish form of Coralie.
Coraly f Obscure
Variant of Coralie.
Corbitant m Wampanoag
Name of a leader under Massasoit from the Pocasset tribe who may have attempted to influence the people in a revolt against the English settlers.
Cordelius m English
Masculine form of Cordelia.
Corissa f English (American)
Possibly a blend of Corinna and Carissa.
Corliss f & m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Corliss.
Cormic m English
Variant of Cormac.
Cornelian m & f English (Rare)
Named for the deep red gemstone which is also known as a carnelian. The word comes from the Latin cornum, meaning "cornel cherry" - a flowering dogwood tree with small, dark red fruit.... [more]
Correy m & f English (Rare)
Variant of Corey.
Corvin m English, German (Swiss, Rare), Romanian
English,German and Romanian form of Corvinus.
Costella f English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Probably a feminine form of Costa.
Countess f Medieval English
Derived from Latin comitissa "countess". This word, while more commonly known as a title, was also used as a personal name occasionally.
Covey m & f Obscure
Transferred use of the surname Covey.
Covid m & f Various (Modern, Rare)
Abbreviation of COronaVIrus Disease.
Craft m Medieval German
Old High German kraft "strength, force, power".
Crenguța f Romanian (Rare)
Derived from Romanian crenguța, the diminutive of creangă, "branch".
Cricket f American (South)
Originally a diminutive of Christina and Christine.
Crin m Romanian
Masculine form of Crina.
Crisogono m Italian
Italian form of Chrysogonos( see Chrysogonus).
Cristea f English
Variant of Christea.
Cristinela f Romanian
Feminine form of Cristinel.
Crockett m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Crockett.
Crowley m English, Irish
Transferred use of the surname Crowley.
Crucita f Spanish
More common variant of Cruzita.
Cruzana f Spanish (Latin American, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Cruz, chiefly used in Colombia. It also coincides with a surname.
Csillag f Hungarian
Means "star" in Hungarian.
Cucunuchi m Yokut
An indigenous alcalde of Mission San José and a member and leader of the Lakisamni tribe of the Yokut people of northern California, popularly known as Estanislao.
Culetta f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Coletta.
Cully m & f English (American, Rare), Popular Culture
Transferred use of the surname Cully.... [more]
Cummins m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Cummins.
Cunegonda f Italian (Rare), Dutch (Rare), Corsican (Archaic), Gascon (Archaic), Provençal (Archaic)
Dutch variant and Italian, Corsican, Gascon and Provençal form of Kunigunde.
Cungagnaq m Aleut
Birth name of St. Peter the Aleut.
Cunzaga m Sicilian
Siclian form of Gonzague.
Cường m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 強 (cường) meaning "strong, powerful, vigorous".
Cupcake f & m Obscure
From the English word cupcake "a small cake baked in a paper container shaped like a cup, often with icing on top".
Curneliu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Cornelio.
Currie m English
Transferred use of the surname Currie.
Curry m & f English (American, Rare)
Transferred use from the surname Curry.
Custanza f Sicilian
Feminine form of Custanzu.
Cvetan m Croatian (Rare), Serbian, Macedonian, Bulgarian
Cognate of Cvitan and Bulgarian variant transcription of Цветан (see Tsvetan).
Cvetana f Croatian (Rare), Serbian, Bulgarian, Slovene
Cognate of Cvitana and Bulgarian variant transcription of Tsvetana.
Cvijetka f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvijetko.
Cvijetko m Croatian
Croatian alternative form of Cvetko.
Cvitana f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvitan.
Cvitka f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvitko.
Cvjetislav m Croatian (Rare)
Derived from Croatian cvijet meaning "blossom, flower" and slava "glory".
Cvjetko m Croatian, Serbian
Croatian variant of Cvetko.
Cyane f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Κυανη (Kyane) which was derived from κυανος (kyanos) "cyan, azure-blue" (compare Cyan). In Greek myth she was the Naiad nymph of a spring in the Sicilian town of Syracuse, who dissolved away into the spring from grief after witnessing Hades' abduction of her playmate Persephone.
Cyla f Kashubian
Diminutive of Cecyliô, Celestina and Celina.
Cylin f English (American)
Possibly a variant of Caelan or Kylen.
Cymry f English
Means ''Welsh'', plural of Cymro ''Welshman''.
Cyprine f French (Rare), French (Quebec, Rare)
Possibly a contracted form of Cypriane.
Cyprión m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Cyprian.
Cyrax m Popular Culture
Cyrax is a player character from the Mortal Kombat fighting game franchise.
Cyrylla f Polish
Variant of Cyryla.
Dabi m Basque
Basque form of David.
Dabius m History
St. Dabius, or Davius, Confessor, was an Irish missionary to Scotland. He was part of the great monastic missionary effort in the British Isles, and then in Europe.
Dacoda m & f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Dakota (See also Dacota and Dakoda)
Daelyn f & m English (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Dale and the popular name suffix lyn, probably based on similar-sounding names such as Kaylyn, Raelyn and Shaelyn.
Daemon m Literature
Although in classical mythology, a "daemon" is said to be a malevolent spirit, recent use of this name is almost certainly derived from a literary source.... [more]
Daentie f Dutch (Archaic)
Archaic form of Daantje.
Da-hye f Korean
From Sino-Korean(Hanja) 多(da) meaning "Excellent, Better, Good" and 惠(hye) meaning "Love, Grace, Beautiful, Intelligent" or 慧(hye) meaning "Wise, Intelligent, Wisdom".
Daimhín m Irish
Diminutive of damh "bard, poet".
Daisey f English
Variant of Daisy.
Daisha f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Of uncertain origin and meaning.... [more]
Daishi m Japanese
From Japanese 大 meaning "large, great" and 師 meaning "master".
Daiya m & f Japanese
From Japanese 大 (dai) meaning "big, great" combined with 也 (ya) meaning "also". Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Dajah f American
Variant of Deja.
Dajing m & f Chinese
From Chinese 大 () meaning "big, great, vast, high" combined with 靖 (jìng) meaning "calm, quiet, peaceful" or 经 (jīng) meaning "pass through, endure"... [more]
Dajohn m English (American)
Combination of the prefix Da and John.
Dajuan m African American (Modern)
Variant of Dejuan. It can be spelled Dajuan or with a capitalized third letter as DaJuan.
Dakhota f & m English
Variant of Dakota.
Dalanda f Western African, African American
Means "creative" in Fulani.
Dalebora f Polish
Feminine form of Dalebor.
Dalewin m Polish (Rare)
An old Polish masculine name, composed of two parts: Dale- "far away", and -win, meaning "uncle". Therefore it means "one whose uncle is far away", "one whose mother's family is far away".
Dalewuja f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalewin.
Dalgliesh m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Dalgliesh.
Daliyah f Hebrew
Variant of Dalya.
Dalkiel m Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend (Rare)
A demon first mentioned by Joseph Gikatilla ben Abraham (1248-1305) in his book "Baraita de Massachet Gehinnom".... [more]
Dally m English (American), Literature, Indonesian
Short form of Dallas. Dallas 'Dally' Winston from the novel The Outsiders by S.E Hinton bears this name.
Dalmira f Galician
Feminine form of Dalmiro.
Damaruki f Sanskrit, Indian, Hindi, Sinhalese, Nepali, Telugu, Tamil
MEANING : a sort of drum... [more]
Damask f Popular Culture
Transferred use of the surname Damask.
Dambar m Nepali
MEANING : great noise, verbosity, beauty, entanglement, course
Damiët f Dutch, Literature
A character in the medieval Esmoreit story, a princess
Damirka f Croatian
Feminine form of Damir.
Damonassa f Ancient Greek
δῆμος (demos) "of the people" + ἄνασσα (anassa) "queen, lady"
Damond m English (American)
Possibly a variant of Damon.
Damontre m African American
Meaning unknown.
Dana f & m Sorbian, Polish, Hungarian
Feminine short form of Danuta, Danisława, Bohdana and Danijela or Daniella and masculine short form of Danijel.
Dánae f Spanish
Spanish form of Danaë.
Danaja f Slovene, Croatian (Rare), Serbian (Rare)
Croatian, Serbian and Slovene form of Danaë.
Dané f Afrikaans
Variant of Danaë.
Daneli m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Daniel.
Danell m & f English
Transferred use of the surname Danell or a variant of Danielle.
Danie m Afrikaans
Diminutive of Daniël.
Daniila f Russian
Feminine form of Daniil.
Danijar m Bosnian (Rare), Kazakh (Rare)
Bosnian form and Kazakh variant transcription of Daniyar.
Danilka f Croatian, Serbian
Feminine form of Danilo.
Danilko m Croatian (Rare)
An elaboration of Danilo.
Danir m Bosnian
Bosnian male form of Danira.
Danira f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Deïanira.
Danjal m Faroese
Faroese variant of Daniel.
Danneel f English
Possibly an altered form of Danielle influenced by Tennille.
Dannielle f English, Jèrriais
Jèrriais form and English variant of Danielle.
Danúbio m Portuguese (Brazilian, Modern)
Transferred use of the name of Rio Danúbio.
Danuška f Croatian, Slovak, Slovene
Diminutive of Danica (Slovene), Daniela ( Slovak) and Danijela (Croatian). Also compare Danuša.
Danya m Russian
Diminutive of Daniil.
Daoud m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Dawud.
Daouda m Western African
Form of Dawud used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Daphnis m Greek Mythology
From Greek δάφνη, meaning "laurel tree". In Greek mythology, Daphnis was the son of Hermes and an unnamed nymph. His mother left him under a laurel tree, where he was found by a shepherd and named after the tree... [more]
Dara f Slovene, Croatian
Short form of Darinka.
Darel m & f English (Rare), Hebrew (Rare)
In Hebrew it’s a combination of the name Dar, means "(mother of) pearl, nacre" and El, reference to God. In English it’s used as variant of Darell.
Dária f Hungarian, Slovak
Feminine form of Dárius.
Daria f Kurdish
Cognate of Darya 2.
Darijan m Slovene, Croatian
An elaboration of Darijo.
Darin m Bulgarian
Masculine form of Darina 2.
Darinko m Croatian
Croatian male form of Darinka.
Darjan m Croatian, Serbian
Either a form of Darian or a derivative of the Slavic element dar meaning "gift".
Darka f Serbian (Rare), Croatian, Slovene
Either a feminine form of Darko or a short form of other feminine dar- names like Darinka or, as some sources suggest, even Darija.
Darki m Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Darius.
Darkseid m Popular Culture
Darkseid (pronounced "Darkside'') is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Daro f Georgian
Short form of Darejan.
Daroach m Popular Culture
From Kirby, an action-platformer video game series developed by HAL Laboratory and published by Nintendo.
Darol m American (Rare)
Variant of Darrell and the name of American violinist Darol Anger (1963-) as well as that of American born, Canadian educated physicist Darol Kenneth Froman (1906-1997), Deputy Director of Los Alamos National Laboratory in the 1950s and early 1960s.
Daron m English
Variant of Darren. A known bearer of this name was the American country singer Daron Norwood (1965-2015).
Darqueze m African American (Rare)
A modern invented name of unknown meaning, possibly influenced by Marquise.
Darroch m Scottish
The name Darroch is said to derive from Macdara which is Scottish Gaelic for ''son of oak''.
Darroll m English
Variant of Darrell.
Daruś m Polish
Diminutive of Dariusz.
Darvin m English
Variant of Darwin.
Darya f Hebrew (Modern)
Combination of the name Dar, means "(mother of) pearl" with the letters יה (ya) (which are part of the name of God) means "Pearl of God" in Hebrew.
Daša f Slovene, Croatian
Variant of Dasha.
Dascha f Russian, Ukrainian, Dutch (Rare), German (Rare)
Variant transcription of Dasha (for Russia and the Ukraine) as well as the main form of Dasha in Germany and the Netherlands.... [more]
Dášeňka f Czech, Slovak
Variant spelling of Dašenka. Used by Czech writer Karel Čapek in his book Dášeňka čili život štěněte (Dashenka, or the Life of a Puppy, 1933).
Dašenka f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Daša.
Dashurie f Albanian
Derived from Albanian dashuri "love, affection; enthusiasm".
Daška f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Daša.
Daumants m Latvian
Latvian form of Daumantas.
Davarryl m African American (Modern, Rare)
DaVarryl Williamson (b. 1968) is an American boxer.
Daví m Catalan, Aragonese, Judeo-Catalan
Catalan and Aragonese form of David.
Davidson m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Davidson.
Davorina f Slovene
Feminine form of Davorin.