Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the edit status is usages AND description are verified.
gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Totte m Swedish
Diminutive of Torsten. Sometimes also used as a diminutive of other names starting with To-.
Totti m Old Norse, German, Swedish
Old Norse diminutive of Þórsteinn as well as a German and Swedish diminutive of Torsten and Thorsten.
Totti f English (Rare)
Diminutive of Charlotte and Dorothy. A known bearer of this name was the British actress Totti Truman Taylor (1903-1981), whose birth name was Dorothy Leah Truman.
Toufique m Bengali
Bengali form of Tawfiq.
Touhid m Bengali
Bengali variant of Tawhid.
Touichi m Japanese
From Japanese 塔 (tou) meaning "pagoda, tower, steeple" combined with 一 (ichi) meaning "one". Other kanji combinations are possible. ... [more]
Touko m Finnish
From Finnish touko meaning "sowing (in the springtime)".
Toula f Greek
Short form of Fotoula.
Toullios m Ancient Roman (Hellenized)
Hellenized form of Tullius (see Tullio).
Toumas m Walloon, Guernésiais, Provençal
Walloon, Guernésiais and Provençal form of Thomas.
Toumasse f Guernésiais
Feminine form of Toumas.
Touneto f Provençal
Short form of Antouneto.
Touraj m Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian تورج (see Turaj).
Touran f Persian
Modern Persian form or variant transcription of Turan.
Tours m French (Swiss, Archaic)
Contraction of Saint Ours recorded in French-speaking Switzerland up until the 19th century.
Toussaine f Medieval French, French (Archaic)
Late medieval variant of Toussainte recorded up until the 17th century.
Toussainte f French
Feminine form of Toussaint.
Tóva f Faroese
Faroese form of Tófa.
Toviy m Russian
Variant form of Toviya.
Toviya m Russian
Russian form of Toviyyah (see Tobiah) via its Biblical Greek form Tobias.
Tovuz f Azerbaijani
Means "peacock" in Azerbaijani, ultimately from Arabic طاووس (ṭāwūs).
Towa f Swedish
Variant of Tova 2.
Towa m Japanese
From Japanese 永 (to) meaning "long, lengthy, eternity" or 遠 (to) meaning "remote, distant, far" combined with 久 (wa) meaning "long time" combined with 磐 (wa) meaning "rock"... [more]
Towe f Swedish
Variant of Tove.
Towfik m Bengali
Bengali variant of Tawfiq.
Towfiq m Bengali
Bengali form of Tawfiq.
Towfique m Bengali
Bengali variant of Tawfiq.
Towhid m Bengali
Alternate transcription of Tawhid.
Townley m English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Transferred from the English surname Townley.
Townsend m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Townsend.
Townsley m English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Transferred from the English surname Townsley.
Towşan f Turkmen (Rare)
Derived from Turkmen towşan "hare", ulitmately from Proto-Turkic *tabɨĺgan "hare". Towşan Esenowa (1915 - 1988) was a Turkmen Soviet poetess, writer, playwright and translator. She was an "Honored Poetess of the Turkmen SSR" (1939) and "People's Writer of the Turkmen SSR" (1974).
Toxeo m Spanish
Spanish form of Toxeus.
Toxeu m Catalan, Portuguese
Catalan and Portuguese form of Toxeus.
Toxeus m Greek Mythology
Derived from Greek τοξεύς (toxeus) meaning "bowman, archer", which is ultimately derived from Greek τόξον (toxon) meaning "bow". Also compare Greek τοξεύω (toxeuo) "to shoot with the bow" and Greek τοξεία (toxeia) "archery"... [more]
Toʻybibi f Uzbek (Rare)
Derived from Uzbek toʻy meaning "celebration, wedding" combined with Persian بی‌بی‌ (bibi) meaning "learned woman, dame, lady".
Toyib m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Tayyib.
Toyibah f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Tayyiba.
Toyosi m & f Nigerian, Yoruba
Means "something to rejoice about" in Yoruba, also used as a short form for other names ending in -toyosi including Olutoyosi or Oluwatoyosi.
Toyoyuki m Japanese
Japanese masculine name derived from 豊 (toyo) meaning "abundant, lush" and 雪 (yuki) meaning "snow". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Toyuelembi m Medieval Baltic
Medieval Estonian variant of Thoyuelembe.
Toyyib m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Tayyib.
Toyyibah f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Tayyiba.
Tozquihua m Nahuatl
Means "someone with a voice" or "he who can sing" in Nahuatl, from tozquitl "voice" and the possessive suffix -hua.
Trà f & m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 茶 (trà) meaning "tea".
Trác m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 卓 (trác) meaning "tall, elevated".
Track m English (Rare)
From Middle English trak, tracke, from Old French trac, from a Germanic source akin to Old Norse traðk (“a track; path; trodden spot”).
Traeh f English
The word heart spelled backwards.
Trafalgar m Romani (Archaic)
From the place name Cape Trafalgar in Spain, location of a sea battle in 1805 won by the British fleet under the command of Admiral Nelson.
Trahlyta f Cherokee (?), New World Mythology (?), Folklore
The name of a legendary Cherokee princess.
Traiana f Italian
Feminine form of Traiano.
Traiano m Italian (Rare)
Italian form of Trajan 1.
Traiko m Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Трайко (see Trayko).
Trairong m Thai
Means "tricolour" in Thai, most frequently used to refer to the Thai national flag.
Trajà m Catalan
Catalan form of Trajan 1.
Trajaan m Dutch (Archaic)
Archaic Dutch form of Trajan 1.
Trajana f Macedonian
Feminine form of Trajan 2.
Trajano m Spanish, Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese form of Trajan 1.
Trajectina f German (Rare, Archaic), Dutch (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from Latin traiectum "crossing (of a river)". It was the name of two Dutch cities, Utrecht and Maastricht (Mosa Traiectum).... [more]
Traktor m Soviet, Russian (Rare)
Derived from the Russian noun трактор (traktor) meaning "tractor" (as in, the agricultural vehicle). This name was used by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Traktorin m Soviet, Russian (Rare)
Derived from the Russian noun трактор (traktor) meaning "tractor" (as in, the agricultural vehicle) combined with the Russian possessive suffix -ин (-in). This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Traktorina f Soviet, Russian (Rare)
Feminine form of Traktorin. This name was used by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Trâm f & m Vietnamese
Vietnamese word referring to a certain species of plant.
Trân m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 珍 (trân) meaning "rare, valuable".
Trandafir m Romanian (Rare)
Derived from Romanian trandafir "rose".
Trandafira f Romanian
Derived from Romanian trandafir "rose".
Tráng m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 壯 (tráng) meaning "strong, robust".
Trankvil m Bosnian, Croatian
Bosnian and Croatian form of Tranquillus.
Tranquilino m Spanish (Rare)
Spanish form of Tranquillinus. Notable bearers of this name include Tranquilino Luna, a 19th-century American politician, and Saint Tranquilino Ubiarco Robles (1899-1928), a Mexican priest who was martyred during the persecutions of the Mexican Revolution and canonized in 2000.
Tranquillinus m Late Roman
Diminutive of Tranquillus, as is evidenced by the suffix -inus. This was the name of a saint from the 3rd century AD.
Tranquillus m Late Roman, History
Derived from Latin tranquillus "quiet, calm, still". A known bearer of this name was Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, a Roman historian from the 2nd century AD.
Tranquilo m Spanish, Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese form of Tranquillus.
Trapezeus m Greek Mythology
Derived from Greek τραπεζεύς (trapezeus) meaning "of a table, at a table", which is ultimately derived from Greek τράπεζα (trapeza) meaning "table". Also compare the modern English word trapeze, which is etymologically related... [more]
Trasamondo m Italian
Italian form of Thrasamund.
Trasamundo m Spanish
Spanish form of Thrasamund.
Trashi m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan བཀྲ་ཤིས (see Tashi).
Trasíbulo m Spanish, Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese form of Thrasybulus.
Trasibulo m Italian
Italian form of Thrasybulus.
Trasideo m Italian, Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Thrasydaeus.
Trasilla f Late Roman
The name of a 6th century saint, aunt of Pope Gregory I.
Trasímac m Catalan
Catalan form of Thrasymachus.
Trasímaco m Galician, Spanish, Portuguese
Galician, Spanish and Portuguese form of Thrasymachus.
Trasimaco m Italian
Italian form of Thrasymachus.
Trauda f Silesian
Short form of Edeltrauda.
Traute f German (Rare)
Short form of names that begin with or end in "-traut" and "-traud". See Adeltraud.
Travalaha f Germanic Mythology
Travalaha was a Germanic goddess known from an inscription found in Cologne, Germany. The origin and meaning of her name are uncertain, however one theory suggests a derivation from Proto-Norse þrāwō "to long for"... [more]
Travanti m English (American, Rare)
Transferred from the surname Travanti due to the popularity of the actor Daniel J. Travanti.
Traxano m Galician
Galician form of Trajan 1.
Trayana f Bulgarian (Rare)
Feminine form of Trayan.
Trazana f African American (Rare)
Meaning unknown. It might possibly be an alteration (through metathesis) of Tarzana, which is said to mean "strange woman" in Bantu. Also compare Tarzan.... [more]
Trazymach m Polish
Polish form of Thrasymachus.
Trực m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 直 (trực) meaning "straight, direct, honest".
Trdat m Armenian, Georgian (Archaic)
Armenian form of Tiridata, which was also used in Georgia in older times.
Treat m English
From Middle English (in the senses ‘negotiate’ and ‘discuss a subject’) from Old French traitier, from Latin tractare ‘handle’, frequentative of trahere ‘draw, pull’.
Trebor m English (Rare)
The name Robert spelled backwards, sometimes inspired by the similar name Trevor.
Trecén m Spanish
Spanish form of Troezen.
Tredarius m African American
Probably a combination of the name element TRE "three" with the name Darius.
Treesje f Dutch
Diminutive of Trees, as it contains the Dutch diminutive suffix -je.
Treeve m Cornish
Derived from Cornish tre "farmstead, dwelling, town, village, home".
Trefume m Occitan (Archaic), Provençal (Archaic)
Occitan and Provençal form of Trophimus.
Tregna f Romansh
Short form of Catregna, traditionally found in central Grisons.
Tregory m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Tregory.... [more]
Treicy f Spanish (Latin American, Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare)
Latin American form of Tracy, reflecting the English pronunciation.
Treise f Irish
Variant of Treasa.
Trejsi f Albanian (Modern)
Albanian borrowing of Tracy.
Trejú f Romani (Caló)
Means "cross" in Caló, referring to the cross of crucifixion. It is used as the Caló equivalent of Cruz.
Tremedal f Spanish
Means "quagmire" in Spanish, taken from the Spanish titles of the Virgin Mary, La Virgen del Tremedal and Nuestra Señora del Tremedal, meaning "The Virgin of the Quagmire" and "Our Lady of the Quagmire." She is venerated at the sanctuary in Orihuela del Tremedal in the Aragonese municipality of Teruel.
Trenay f African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the phonetic elements tre and nay, probably modelled on Renee.
Trëndafil m Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian trëndafil "rose".
Trendafil m Bulgarian (Rare)
Bulgarian masculine form of Trendafilka. Though it was popular in the 19th and 20th centuries, its usage has declined in recent years. The name also coincides with the Bulgarian word for the Japanese rose, a type of flower.
Trendafila f Bulgarian (Rare)
Derived from Bulgarian трендафил "rose".
Trëndafile f Albanian
Derived from Albanian trëndafil "rose".
Trëndelinë f Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian trëndelinë "sickle-fruited fenugreek" and, figuratively, "pleasant and pretty girl".
Trenisha f African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the phonetic elements tre, nee and sha.
Trenk m Literature
The title hero in the series of children's books by Kirsten Boie 'Der kleine Ritter Trenk'.... [more]
Tréphine f Breton (Rare), History (Ecclesiastical, Gallicized)
Gallicized form of Triphina, the name of a 6th-century Breton saint.
Tresa f Aragonese, Sicilian, Romansh
Aragonese form of Theresa, Sicilian contraction of Tiresa and Teresa and Romansh contraction of Teresa.
Treshawn m African American (Modern)
Combination of the popular phonetic prefix tre and Shawn.
Tréska f Kashubian
Diminutive of Teréza.
Tresl f Ladin
Diminutive of Theresia.
Tresna m & f Sundanese
Means "love, affection" in Sundanese, ultimately from Sanskrit तृष्णा (tṛ́ṣṇā).
Tresno m Javanese
Variant of Trisno.
Tress f English (Rare)
Diminutive of Theresa.
Tressa f Cornish (Modern)
Derived from Cornish tressa "third". This is a modern Cornish name.
Trestan m Breton
Variant of Tristan.
Tretyak m Medieval Ukrainian
Means "third (person)" in Ukrainian. Denoted to the third child in a family.
Trevalene f English (American, Rare)
Possibly a combination of Treva and lene.
Trevaughn m African American
Variant of Trevon influenced by Vaughn.
Treveonta m African American (Rare)
Possibly a blend of names such as Trevion (or Treveon) and Trevonte... [more]
Treveur m Breton
Derived from Breton trec'h "victory, superiority" and meur "great".
Treza f Slovene
Contracted form of Tereza and Terezija.
Trezena m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Troezen.
Trezene m Italian
Italian form of Troezen.
Trézsi f Hungarian
Diminutive of Terézia.
Trezza f Maltese
Contracted form of Tereża.
Trial m English (Puritan)
Meaning, "to test (something, especially a new product) to assess its suitability or performance." Referring to the trials and tribulations that may come with faith in God.
Triantaphillos m Greek
Variant transliteration of Triantafyllos.
Triantaphyllos m Greek
Variant transliteration of Triantafyllos.
Tribulation m English (Puritan), Literature
Middle English via Old French from ecclesiastical Latin tribulatio(n-), from Latin tribulare ‘press, oppress’, from tribulum ‘threshing board (constructed of sharp points)’, based on terere ‘rub’... [more]
Tridecima f English (British, Rare, Archaic)
Feminine form of Latin tridecimus "thirteenth".
Trie m & f Indonesian
Variant of Tri.
Trien f Dutch, Flemish, Limburgish
Short form of Catrien and Katrien. In practice, the name is also used on bearers of related names, such as Catharina and Trijntje.
Trieste m & f Italian (Rare, Archaic)
From the name of the Italian city and harbour Trieste
Trifena f Russian (Rare), Italian
Russian and Italian form of Tryphena.
Trifin f Medieval Breton
Original Breton form of Triphina.
Trifina f Breton (Archaic)
Younger form of Trifin, recorded up until the 19th century.
Trífon m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Tryphon.
Trifone m Italian
Italian form of Tryphon.
Trig m English
Anglicized form of Trygve.
Triina f Estonian
Short form of Katariina.
Triine f Estonian
Variant of Triina.
Trilby f English (Rare), Literature
The name of the titular character in George Du Maurier's 1894 novel 'Trilby', about an tone-deaf model who is hypnotized to become a talented singer. The name became a (now obsolete) colloquial term for a foot, as the character's feet were objects of admiration... [more]
Trillian f Literature
Used in Douglas Adams's 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.' In the story, Trillian is an elided form of her full name, Tricia McMillan.
Triman m Javanese
From Javanese tri meaning "three" (of Sanskrit origin) combined with the masculine suffix -man.
Trimo m Javanese
From Javanese trima meaning "to accept, to receive".
Trinchen f German (Rare)
Diminutive of Katharina, as it contains the German diminutive suffix -chen.... [more]
Trīne f Latvian (Rare)
Short form of Katrīne, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Trinemia f Faroese
Combination of Trine and Mia.
Trinete f Walloon
Diminutive of Catrine.
Trinette f Dutch (Rare), Flemish (Rare), Limburgish
Dutch, Flemish and Limburgish short form of Catharina, which was created by combining its short form Trina with the French diminutive suffix -ette... [more]
Tringë f Albanian
Derived from Albanian tringë "bullfinch, finch". Tringë Smajl Martini Ivezaj (1880 – 2 November 1917) was an Albanian guerrilla fighter who fought against the Ottoman Empire in the Malësia region... [more]
Trinitat f & m Catalan
Catalan cognate of Trinidad.
Trinken f Norwegian
Norwegian diminutive of Trine (via Low German and Frisian Trinchen).
Trinley m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཕྲིན་ལས (see Thinley).
Trino m Spanish (Rare)
Strictly masculine diminutive of Trinidad.
Triono m Javanese
From Javanese tri meaning "three" combined with either the masculine suffix -na or the word ana meaning "being, having, holding".
Triphina f Breton, History
Allegedly from Trifin, a Welsh name derived from triw "exact, precise". This was the name of a 6th-century Breton saint, wife of the tyrant Conomor who killed their young son Tremorus.
Triphop m Thai
Means "three worlds", from Thai ตรี (tri) meaning "three" and ภพ (phop) meaning "world".
Tripon m Georgian
Georgian form of Tryphon.
Tripop m Thai
Alternate transcription of Triphop.
Tripti f Hindi
Means "satisfaction, contentment, delight" in Sanskrit.
Triptolemos m Greek Mythology
Derived from Greek τρι- (tri-) meaning "three, thrice" combined with the Epic Greek noun πτόλεμος (ptolemos) meaning "war".
Triptolemus m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Triptolemos. In Greek mythology, this is the name of the eldest son of king Celeus of Eleusis.
Triputra m Indonesian
Combination of Tri and Putra.
Triputri f Indonesian
Combination of Tri and Putri.
Trismegistos m Ancient Greek
Derived from the Greek adjective τρισμέγιστος (trismegistos) meaning "thrice-greatest", which consists of the Greek adverb τρίς (tris) meaning "thrice, three times" combined with the Greek adjective μέγιστος (megistos) meaning "biggest, largest, greatest" (see Megistos).... [more]
Trismegistus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Trismegistos. This was an epithet of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth, who were worshipped as one god by Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt.
Trisnawati f Indonesian
Derived from Javanese trisna meaning "love" combined with the feminine suffix -wati.
Trisno m Javanese
From Javanese trisna meaning "love, affection", ultimately from Sanskrit तृष्णा (tṛ́ṣṇā).
Tristana f Literature, Breton, Provençal
Feminine form of Tristan. This is the name of the main character in Benito Pérez Galdós' eponymous novel Tristana (1892).
Tristanas m Lithuanian (Rare)
Lithuanian form of Tristan.
Tristano m Italian
Italian form of Tristan.
Tristaun m Norman
Norman form of Tristan.
Tristrant m Medieval German, Arthurian Cycle
Variant of Tristram, used in Eilhart von Oberg's 'Tristrant und Isalde'.
Trisula m Indonesian
Means "trident" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit त्रिशूल (triśūla).
Trisulo m Javanese
Javanese form of Trisula.
Trisztán m Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Tristan.
Trixi f Hungarian, German
Short form of Beatrix or Beatrice, parallel to english Trixie
Trixibelle f English
Possibly coined by television presenter Paula Yates and musician Bob Geldof for their daughter Fifi Trixibelle Geldof (1983-), from a combination of Trixie and Belle.
Triyanti f Indonesian
Feminine form of Triyanto.
Triyanto m Indonesian
Combination of Tri and Yanto.
Triyatno m Javanese
Combination of Tri and Yatno.
Triyono m Javanese
Variant of Triono.
Trjónn m Old Norse
From Old Norse trjóna "nose, snout".
Troadios m History (Ecclesiastical)
Original Greek form of Troadius.
Troadius m History (Ecclesiastical, Latinized)
From Ancient Greek Τρωάδιος (Troadios) meaning "of Troad", itself from Τρωάδα (Troada) meaning "the region of Troy, Troad"... [more]
Troed m Swedish (Rare)
From Old Swedish Troghed, ultimately derived from Old Norse Þórgautr.
Troezen m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Τροιζήν (Troizen), which may possibly have been derived from Greek Τροία (Troia), the original Greek name for the city of Troy. Troezen might then roughly mean "of Troy"... [more]
Tròfim m Catalan
Catalan form of Trophimus.
Trofima f Dutch (Archaic), Italian (Archaic), Polish (Archaic), Russian (Rare)
Dutch, Italian, Polish and Russian form of Trophima.
Trofimaș m Romanian (Rare)
Extremely rare variant of Trofim, which is the standard form of Trophimus in Romania and Moldova.
Trofimena f Italian (Rare)
This given name is best known for being the name of the 7th-century saint Trofimena, who was born and raised on the island of Sicily. During her lifetime, Sicily was a province of the Byzantine Empire, where Greek was the primary language... [more]
Trófimo m Spanish (Rare), Portuguese (Archaic)
Spanish and Portuguese form of Trophimus.
Trofimus m Afrikaans (Archaic), Dutch (Archaic)
Afrikaans and Dutch form of Trophimus.
Troightheach m Old Irish
Means "foot-soldier", from Old Irish traig "foot, step".
Troja f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Swedish form of Troy, the name of the ancient city in Turkey that appears in Homer's 'Iliad'.
Tron m Norwegian
Variant of Trond.
Tróndur m Faroese
Faroese form of Þróndr.
Trọng m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 重 (trọng) meaning "repeat, duplicate".
Trophima f Late Greek, Late Roman
Feminine form of Trophimos (Late Greek) and Trophimus (Late Roman).... [more]
Trophime m French (Rare), French (African, Rare)
French form of Trophimus. A known bearer of this name is the French Baroque painter Trophime Bigot (1579-1650).
Trophimène f French (Archaic)
French form of Trophimena (see Trofimena).
Trophimianus m Late Roman
Roman cognomen which was derived from Trophimus.
Trophy m English (American, Modern, Rare)
Simply from the English word trophy.
Tros m Greek Mythology
Unknown origin. This is the name of the mythical Phrygian king who founded the city of Troy.
Trostlin f Medieval Jewish, Yiddish (Archaic)
Derived from German Trost "solace; comfort". This name was occasionally given to a girl born into a grieving family.
Trott m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Trott.... [more]
Trotte m Swedish
Swedish form of Þrótti.
Tru f & m English (American), Popular Culture
Variant of True as well as a short form of Gertrude and given names that start with Tru-, such as Trudy and Truman.... [more]
Tru f Dutch (Rare), Limburgish
Short form of Geertruida and Gertrudis and their many variants.
Truce m English (American, Modern, Rare)
Simply from the English word truce, possibly popularized for its similarity to names like True and Bruce.
Trúda f Slovak (Rare)
Slovak short form of Gertrúda, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Truda f Silesian, Slovene
Short form of Gertruda.
Trudbert m German (Rare, Archaic), Medieval German
A dithematic name composed from the name elements drud "strength" and beraht "bright".
Trudee f English
Variant spelling of Trudy.
Trudeliese f German (Rare)
Combination of Trude and Liese.
Trudence f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Trudy influenced by the name Prudence.
Trudger m German (Rare, Archaic)
A German name formed from the name elements drud "strength" and ger "javelin, spear".
Trudla f Sorbian
Sorbian short form of Gertrude.
Trudo m Germanic, Dutch (Rare), Flemish (Rare)
Short form of names that contain the Germanic element drud meaning "strength", such as Trudbert.