Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and 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.
Tytianna f African American (Rare)
Variant of Tytiana. Tytianna was given to 7 girls in 2018 according to the SSA.
Tytti f Finnish
Derived from the Finnish word tyttö, meaning "a girl". It has also been used as a pet form of Tyyne.
Tywranika f Guuni
It is from a great story of Haa
Tyyra f Finnish
Finnish spelling of Tyra
Tzacha f Hebrew
Variant transliteration of Zaha.
Tz'akbu f Classic Mayan
Etymology uncertain. A possible meaning is "the successor, the counted one", deriving from the Classic Maya element tz’akbuj (counted, successor). Name borne by Lady Tz'akbu Ajaw, who was the mother of K'inich K'an Joy Chitam II of Palenque.
Tzamila f Greek
Greek form of Jamila.
Tzarina f Russian (Rare)
Derived from the notable wife of the Tzar and popularized in the newer 21st century due to it's exotic pronunciation. It means "wife of the great Tzar"
Tzatana f Kalmyk
Feminine form of Tzatan.
Tzefaniyah f Hebrew
Variation of the name Tzephanya or Tzephanyahu. Means (Hebrew): 'Secret of God'.
Tzemile f Greek, Turkish (Hellenized)
Greek form of the Turkish name Cemile.
Tzeni f Greek
Greek form of Jenny, used as a diminutive of Evgenia.
Tzeril f Yiddish
Tzeril is the Yiddish diminutive form of Sarah meaning 'princess'. When an 'e' is added to the end of the name, it adds the meaning 'little', which is an endearment.
Tzesika f Greek (Rare)
Greek form of Jessica.
Tzetzìlia f Sardinian
Sardinian form of Cecilia.
Tzigliana f Sardinian
Sardinian form of Juliana.
Tzihuacxilotl f & m Nahuatl
Means "young prickly corn cob" or "edible part of the tzihuactli cactus" in Nahuatl, from tzihuactli, a kind of small agave, and xilotl "green ear of maize, young corncob".
Tzihuacxochitl f Nahuatl
Means "agave flower" in Nahuatl, from tzihuactli, a kind of small agave plant, and xōchitl "flower".
Tzihuacxochitzin f Nahuatl
Variant of Tzihuacxochitl, with the diminutive or reverential suffix "-tzin", a suffix that was often used in Aztec royal families. This name was borne by a queen consort of Tezozomoc, the Tlatoani (ruler) of the city-state of Azcapotzalco.
Tzina f Greek
Diminutive of Giorgia, possibly influenced by Gina.
Tziona f Hebrew (Rare), Jewish (Rare)
Variant transcription of Ziona.
Tzipa f Jewish, Yiddish
Translates to "pulp, flesh", as in the covering on a fruit. Also possibly a short form of Tzipora.
Tzipi f Hebrew, Yiddish
Diminutive of Tzipporah. A notable bearer is Israeli politician Tziporah 'Tzipi' Livni (1958-).
Tzippora f Hebrew
Variant transcription of Tzipporah.
Tzipporah f Hebrew
Alternate transcription of Hebrew צִפּוֹרָה (see Tzipora).
Tzippy f Jewish
Diminutive form of Tzipporah.
Tzitzak f Khazar
Khazar form of Çiçek.
Tzitzimitl f Aztec and Toltec Mythology
Etymology uncertain; the second element is probably mitl, meaning "arrow" in Nahuatl. In Aztec mythology, this was the name of a number of skeletal deities linked to stars, eclipses, and fertility.
Tziyona f Hebrew
Feminine form of Tzion.
Tzlil f & m Hebrew
Variant of the name Tslil which means "sound; voice" in Hebrew.
Tzouli f Greek
Diminutive of Neratzoula.
Tzoulia f Greek
Diminutive of Neratzoula.
Tzoutzou f & m Greek (Rare, ?)
Greek form of Juju.
Tzruya f Hebrew
Modern variant of Zeruiah.
Tzuf m & f Hebrew
Modern Hebrew form of Zuph, or directly from Hebrew צוף (tsuf) meaning "nectar, honeydew".
Tzukit f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Tzuk. This is also the Hebrew word for a type of bird, the rock thrush (genus Monticola).
Tzuri m & f English (Rare), Hebrew (Rare)
Variant of Zuri or Zurie influenced by the Hebrew name Tzuri'el
Tzu-yu f & m Taiwanese
Taiwanese romanization of Ziyu.
Tzviad m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the name Tzvi and the word עַד (ʿaḏ) "an eternity". The illustration of the gazelle, along with the value of eternity, creates a meaning that represents the beauty and existence of the Land of Israel... [more]
Tzviel m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the names Tzvi and El means "Gazelle of God" in Hebrew.
Tzvior m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the names Tzvi and Or meaning "gazelle of light" or "bright gazelle" in Hebrew.
Ẩu f Vietnamese
Derived from Vietnamese 嫗 (yu) which can mean "old woman, hag", "mother", "to raise, nurture" or "friendly". It is often given as the given name of the Vietnamese national hero Lady Trieu.
U m & f Korean
Alternative transcription of the Korean Hangul 우 (see Woo).
Uǎing f Chinese (Min Bei)
Min Bei form of Fan.
Uaininn f Irish
Modern Irish form of Uainionn.
Uallach f Medieval Irish
Derived from Irish uall meaning "pride". Uallach ingen Muinechain (died 934) was an Irish woman poet and Chief Ollam of Ireland.
Uathach f Irish Mythology
From Irish úathach meaning "terrible, dreadful". In Irish legend she was the daughter of Scáthach and fellow teacher at her school for warriors.
Ubaida f Arabic
Feminine form of Ubaid
Ubaldesca f Medieval Italian
Feminine form of Ubaldo. Saint Ubaldesca Taccini (1136–1205) was an Italian Roman Catholic nun and member of the Order of Saint John. Among the miracles attributed to her the most famous is the ability to turn water from the water well in the Church of the Santo Sepolcro in Pisa into wine... [more]
Ubaldina f Spanish, Galician, Portuguese, Italian
Spanish, Galician, Portuguese, and Italian diminutive of Ubalda.
Ubartum f Ancient Near Eastern, Sumerian
Of uncertain etymology, possibly derived from the Sumerian element tum, meaning "wind; cardinal point" or "to bring; to carry away; to obtain". Ubartum was a female physician of the Neo-Sumerian Empire, who lived in Garšana.
Ubava f Serbian
From the Serbian feminine form of убав (ubav) meaning "beautiful, gorgeous, delightful".
Ubbea f East Frisian (?), Swedish (?)
Possibly a variation of Ubbe.
Ubejda f Albanian
Feminine form of Ubejd.
Ubol f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ubon.
Ubolrat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ubonrat.
Ubolwan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ubonwan.
Ubonemem m & f Efik (Modern)
Means "offspring of peace" in Efik.
Ubonvan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ubonwan.
Uchechukwu m & f Igbo, African
Based on the IGBO belief in a Supreme deity, Chukwu whose decision or will is final in the determination of human fate or destiny. It is a combination of two words of the Igbo (IBO), language, UCHE (WISH,WILL,THOUGHT) and CHUKWU (GOD)... [more]
Uchenia f Aragonese
Aragonese form of Eugenia.
Uchima-kali f Odia
Name of an Hindu goddess.
Uda f German
Probably a feminine form of Udo 1; cf. other feminine forms Uta, Ute, and Oda... [more]
Uda f Bontoc (Rare)
Variant of Oda.
Udayja f Balochi
Balochi form of Khadija.
Udde f & m East Frisian, West Frisian
Short form of names containing the West Frankish name element aud (High German ot) "wealth, fortune".
Udea f Folklore
This is the name of the protagonist of the North African fairy tale "Udea and her Seven Brothers".... [more]
Udea f East Frisian
Clearly feminine form of Udde.
Udeera f Swahili
Udeera was a baby born in the covenant of kings in africa she went through trials and tribulations growing up , stories told that god helped her throughout hard times and starvation.... [more]
Udel f Yiddish (Anglicized)
Either from the German Adel meaning "noble" or from Hodel a diminutive of Hudes. Udel (1720-1787), the righteous daughter of the Ba'al Shem Tov, was a historical bearer of this name.
Udela f Low German, German (Modern, Rare)
Udela is a variant of the given name Odilia. It was borne by the first recorded prioress of the Hohenholte monastry in 1230
Udelia f Spanish (Latin American)
Udelia is a feminine name of Hebrew origin, meaning: "song"; "praise God"; "fortunate or prosperous in battle".
Udendaneki f Datooga
Means "the spring, source of water" in Datooga.
Uduakabasi m & f Ibibio, Efik
Means "will of God" in Ibibio and Efik.
Udzuki f & m Japanese (Rare)
This rarely used name can be used as 卯月 (unisex), 宇月 or 右月 (both feminine) with 卯 (bou, mou, u) meaning "east, sign of the hare/rabbit (4th sign of the Chinese zodiac)", 宇 (u) meaning "eaves, heaven, house, roof", 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right" and 月 (gatsu, getsu, tsuki) meaning "month, moon."... [more]
Uendi f & m Albanian (Modern)
Albanian adopted form of Wendy, occassionally given to boys.
U-Fan m & f Korean (Rare)
Variant transcription of Korean Hangul 우환 (see U-Hwan).
Ufemia f Aragonese (Archaic)
Aragonese form of Eufemia.
Ufora f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek ufor meaning "musk". It is also the name of a kind of dance melody.
Uganda f & m African American (Rare)
From the name of the African country.
Ugbaad f Somali
Variant of Ugbad.
Ugbad f Somali
The meaning is a "Bouquet of Roses". It is a new name, people used it as a very advanced language term of the meaning.
Ugen m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཨོ་རྒྱན (see Ugyen).
Ugénie f Jèrriais, Picard
Jèrriais and Picard form of Eugénie.
Ugi m & f Korean (Americanized, Modern, Rare, Archaic)
The literal translation in Hangul (Koreas modern written language) for Ugi (우기) is Monsoon or Rainy season. Ugi (우기) is derived from the Hanja character 雨 (Yǔ meaning rain). Although it is possible that 雨 (Yǔ) was first used/ invented by a Korean during the Gojoseon period (likely established somewhere between 2333bce - 1101bce) as certain regions of modern china were technically considered parts of Ancient Korea (control of these regions switched and evolved over many years many times), it is still most likely the first use of 雨 was in a Chinese dynasty during the use of Old Chinese (Roughly 1766BCE - 256BCE)... [more]
Ugia f Galician (Rare)
Galego reintegracionista form of Uxía.
Ugmilė f Lithuanian (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a variant form of Ugnilė.
Ugo m & f Igbo
Means "eagle" in Igbo. It is also a short form of names containing the element ùgó.
Ugolena f Gascon
Feminine form of Ugon.
Ugolina f Italian
Feminine form of Ugolino.
Ugouno f Provençal
Diminutive of Ugueto.
Ugrinka f Serbian (Rare)
Feminine form of Ugrin.
Ugueta f Gascon
Gascon form of Huguette.
Ugueto f Provençal
Provençal form of Huguette.
Uguzne f Basque
Feminine form of Ugutz.
Ugyen m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From ཨོ་རྒྱན (o-rgyan), the Tibetan name for the medieval Indian state of Oddiyana, which was significant due to its role in the development of Vajrayana Buddhism.
U-Hwan m & f Korean (Rare)
From Korean 宇 (u) meaning "house, roof", 旴 (u) meaning "sunrise", 雨 (u) meaning "rain", 佑 (u), 祐 (u), both meaning "to help", 瑀 (u), 玗 (u), both meaning "jade", 友 (u) meaning "friend", 昱 (u) meaning "sunlight", 煜 (u) meaning "shining; brilliant", 優 (u) meaning "generous; soft", 羽 (u) meaning "feather, wing", or 禹 (U) meaning "Yu the Great", the legendary king of the Xia Dynasty combined with 桓 (hwan) meaning "sapling", 奐 (hwan) meaning "to be numerous, brilliant", 煥 (hwan) meaning "brilliant; shining, lustrous", 晥 (hwan) meaning "bright, morning star", or 歡 (hwan) meaning "happy".... [more]
Uiko f Literature
Uiko is a character in The Temple of the Golden Pavilion, a novel by the Japanese author Yukio Mishima.
Uilleamina f Scottish (Rare, Archaic)
Feminine form of Uilleam and a Scottish form of Wilhelmina.
Uiloq f Greenlandic
Younger form of Uiloĸ.
Uinen f Literature
A character in JRR Tolkien's works. A Quenya form of a name originally from the fictional Valarin language; possibly related to nen meaning "water" or uilë meaning "seaweed, long trailing plant".
Úing f Chinese (Min Bei)
Min Bei form of An 1.
Uira m & f Tahitian
Contracted form of the Tahitian phrase 'anapa te uira i te 'iriātai meaning "lighting flashing across the horizon".
Uirne f Irish Mythology
Means "sharp mouth". Name borne by the sister of Fionn Mac Cumhail in the Fenian Cycle.
Uiscareua f Gaulish
Variant of Uesuca.
Ujaranza f Romani (Caló)
Derived from the Caló word ujarar meaning "to hope" in Caló. This name is used as the Caló form of Esperanza.
Ujjayani f Hinduism
MEANING : victorious, to win. It was the name of an city ... [more]
Ujjayini f Hinduism
MEANING : victorious, to win. It was the name of an city ... [more]
Ujjwala f Indian
Variant of Ujjal.
Ujuaanna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Ujuãna.
Ujuãna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Johanna.
Úkaĸ f & m Greenlandic
Means "the space in front of the platform" in Greenlandic.
Ukakhvi f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Agafya.
Ukaliina f Greenlandic
Younger form of Ukalîna.
Ukalîna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic name with the combination of Ukaleĸ and suffix -na.
Ukaliusi m & f Greenlandic
Younger form of Ukaliuse.
Ukanesh f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Agatha.
Uke m & f Igbo
Short form of names beginning with or containing Uke-.
Ukhime f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Evfimiya.
Uki f Japanese
The meaning of the name is "Floating" Other names include Uke or in Japan 受け
Ukiah f & m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Ukiah.
Ukie f Japanese
From Japanese 右 (u) meaning "right", 喜 (ki) meaning "rejoice" combined with 絵 (e) meaning "picture, painting, drawing, sketch". This name can also be composed of other kanji combinations.
Ukkaq f & m Greenlandic
Younger form of Úkaĸ.
Üklin f Khakas
Khakas form of Akulina.
Ukon m & f Japanese
This name is used as 右近 with 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right" and 近 (kin, kon, chika.i) meaning "akin, early, near, tantamount."... [more]
Ukpahyugoco m & f Agatu
Means "power of God" in Agatu.
Ukume f Nigerian
"Ukume" means "sound of rain in water/ river" in nigerian
Ukyō m & f Japanese
This name can be used as 右京, 右恭, 侑京, 宇京, 宇郷, 宇恭, 宇響, 羽京, 羽恭 or 羽響 with 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right", 侑 (u, yuu, susu.meru, tasu.keru) meaning "urge to eat", 宇 (u) meaning "eaves, heaven, house, roof", 羽 (u, ha, hane, wa) meaning "feathers", 京 (kyou, kin, kei, miyako) meaning "capital", 恭 (kyou, uyauya.shii) meaning "respect, reverent", 郷 (kyou, gou, sato) meaning "district, home town, native place, village" and 響 (kyou, hibi.ku) meaning "echo, resound, ring, sound, vibrate."... [more]
Ūla f Lithuanian
Derived from Ūla, which is the name of a river in Dzūkija National Park (located near the villages of Marcinkonys and Merkinė) in southern Lithuania. In turn, the river derives its name from the Baltic root aul-, which comes from Proto-Indo-European *aulo-s or *h₂eulos meaning "tube, pipe"... [more]
Ulaanbaatar m & f Mongolian
Means "red hero" in Mongolian, from улаан (ulaan) meaning "red" and bat (baatar) meaning "hero". This is also the name of the capital city of Mongolia.
Ulada f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Vlada.
Uladzimira f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Vladimira.
Uladzislava f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Vladislava.
Ulagan f & m Mongolian
Variant spelling of Ulaan.
Ulalume f Literature
Possibly from Latin ululare "to wail" or lumen "light". This was the title character of Edgar Allen Poe's poem 'Ulalume' (1847).
Ulana f Kalmyk
Feminine form of Ulan.
Ulanni f Polynesian
Variant of Ulani.
Ulara f Kyrgyz
From Kyrgyz улар (ular) meaning "snowcock (a type of bird)”.
Ûlaríka f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Ulrika.
Ulasta f Belarusian
Feminine form of Ulas.
Ulbobek f Kazakh (Rare)
Means "baby boy" from Kazakh ұл (ul) "son, boy" and бөбек (böbek) "baby, newborn". This name was traditionally given to girls when her family was expecting a boy in hopes that the next child of the family would be male.
Ulbolsin f Kazakh
Variant transcription of Ulbolsyn.
Ulbolsyn f Kazakh
Means "let it be a son" from Kazakh ұл (ul) meaning "boy, son" and болсын (bolsyn) "let (it be)". This name was traditionally given to daughters whose families were expecting a boy, in hopes that the next child of the family would be male.
Ulcia f Polish
Diminutive of Urszula.
Ulduzə f Azerbaijani
Strictly feminine form of Ulduz.
Uleczka f Polish
Diminutive of Urszula.
Uleńka f Polish
Diminutive of Urszula.
Úlfa f Icelandic
Feminine form of Úlfur.
Ulfa f German (Rare)
Feminine form of Ulf.
Ulfah f Indonesian
Variant of Ulfa.
Ulfatkhonim f Tajik
From Arabic ألفة (ulfa) meaning "intimacy, affection" combined with Persian خانم (khanum), the feminine form of khan meaning "king, ruler"
Úlfey f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Formed from Úlfur and Old Norse ey "island" or ey "good fortune"... [more]
Úlfhildur f Icelandic
Younger form of Úlfhildr.
Ülger m & f Turkish, Medieval Turkic, Near Eastern Mythology, Medieval Mongolian
Derived from "Ülker", the Pleiades; and "Ülgen", a Turkic creator-deity from Tengrism, an ethnic Turkic, Yeniseian, Mongolic religion.... [more]
Uli m & f Hawaiian
Masculine form and feminine short form of Uliuli.
Ulijona f Lithuanian (Archaic)
Lithuanian form of Uliana.
Uliliyašši f Hittite Mythology, Luwian Mythology
Deriving in part from the Hittite element ulili ("field"). Name borne by a goddess of vegetation and fertility, known from Hittite ritual and oracle texts.
Ûlîna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Olina.
Uljan f Kazakh
Alternate transcription of Kazakh Ұлжан (see Ulzhan).
Uljána f Hungarian
Hungarian borrowing of Ulyana.
Uljon f Uzbek (Rare)
The first element of this name is as of yet uncertain. The second element should be derived from the Uzbek noun жон (jon) meaning "soul". It ultimately comes from the Persian noun جان (jan) meaning "soul, being, spirit" as well as "life"... [more]
Ülkər f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Ülker.
Ulke m & f West Frisian (Rare), North Frisian (Rare)
West Frisian variant form of Oelke and North Frisian cognate of Oelke, although it should be noted that it is strictly masculine in North Frisia.
Ulku f & m Turkish (Anglicized)
Variant of Ülkü used outside of Turkey.
Ülla f Estonian
Feminine form of Üllo.
Ulla f Galician (Rare)
Transferred use of the name of the Galician river Ulla, itself from the Proto-Indo-European root *uei- meaning "to twist" after the meandring character of the river.
Ullá f Sami
Sami form of Ulla.
Ullabella f Swedish (Rare)
Combination of Ulla and Bella.
Ullabeth f Swedish (Rare)
Rare combination of Ulla and Elisabeth.
Ullabritt f Swedish
Combination of Ulla and Britt.
Ullagreta f Obscure
Combination of Ulla and Greta.
Ullakarin f Swedish (Rare)
Rare Swedish combination of Ulla and Karin.
Ullamai f Obscure
Variant of Ulla-Maj.
Ulla-Maj f Swedish (Rare)
Combination of Ulla and Maj 2.
Ullamay f Obscure
Variant of Ulla-Maj.
Ullariikka f Finnish
Finnish variant of Ulriika.
Ullavi f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish combination of Ulla and 'home, temple, sanctuary'.
Ullevie f Obscure
Variant of Ullevi.
Uĺliana f Belarusian
Taraškievica Belarusian variant form of Ulyana.
Ulliana f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Juliana.
Ullis f Swedish
Diminutive of Ulrika.
Uʹlljan f Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Julia.
Ulljana f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Juliana.
Uʹlljnaž f Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Juliana.
Ulma f American (Rare, Archaic)
Maybe a variant of Alma 1.
Ulo f Greenlandic
Short form of Ulornaĸ.
Ulof m & f Finnish
Finnish form of Olof.
Ulphia f Frankish (Latinized), History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz "wolf". Saint Ulphia of Amiens was said to be a young girl living on the banks of the Noye who became a hermit at what would become Saint-Acheul, near Amiens in the Kingdom of the Franks, under the spiritual direction of Saint Domitius... [more]
Ulpia f Ancient Roman
Feminine form of the Roman nomen gentilicium Ulpius, ultimately derived from either an Umbrian cognate of the Latin word lupus meaning "wolf", or vulpus meaning "fox".
Ulpiana f Italian
Feminine form of Ulpiano.
Ulpiana f Albanian
Feminine form of Ulpian.
Ulpu f Finnish
Derived from the Finnish word ulpukka, "spatterdock". It can also be used as a pet form of Ulla or Ulriikka.
Ulriika f Finnish
Finnish form of Ulrika.
Ulryka f Polish
Feminine form of Ulryk.
Ultasila f Berber
Means "of the plains" in Tamazight.
Ultrogotha f Frankish
Queen Ultrogotha (510 - after 566/67) was a Frankish Merovingian queen and the wife of Childebert I.
Ultuar f Kazakh (Rare)
Means "give birth to boys" derived from Kazakh ұл (ul) meaning "son, boy" combined with туу (tuu) meaning "be born, to give birth". This name was traditionally given to girls in hopes that the next child of the family would be male.
Ulu m & f Greenlandic
Younger form of Ulo.
Ululani f Hawaiian
Means "heavenly inspiration" from Hawaiian ulu "to grow, be inspired" and lani "heaven, sky". This was the name of a ruler of Hilo.
Ululik m & f Greenlandic
Greenlandic combination of Ulo and -lik (suffix that denotes that the the root word is a form of amulet or helper spirit).
Ulusia f Polish
Diminutive of Urszula.
Ulûsît f Greenlandic
Greenlandic variant form of Orûsît or from Greenlandic uluusiit meaning "cloudberry".
Uluusiit f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Ulûsît.
Ulva f Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare)
Swedish and Norwegian form of Ulfva, an Old Swedish byname meaning "she-wolf".... [more]
Ulve f Estonian
Variant of Ulvi.
Úlvhild f Faroese
Faroese form of Ulvhild.
Ulvhild f Medieval Scandinavian
Composed of the elements ulv ("wolf") and hild ("battle")... [more]
Ulyan f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Yuliana.
Ulyanochka f Russian
Diminutive of Ulyana.
Ulyssie m & f English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Diminutive of Ulysses which was occasionally used as a feminine form of this name.
Ulyuna f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Alyona.
Uma f Japanese
Means "horse" in Japanese. During the Edo period, this name was sometimes given to girls born during the Year of the Horse. It is rarely used today.
Umaamaaq m & f Greenlandic
From a Greenlandic dialectal term of endearment meaning "baby, youngest child".
Umaamii m & f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Umâmê.
Umaima f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic أميمة (see Umayma).
Umaira f Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic عميرة (see Umayra), as well as the Urdu form.
Umairah f Arabic, Malay
Alternate transcription of Arabic عميرة (see Umayra), as well as the Malay form.
Umaiza f Arabic (Rare)
The meaning of Umaiza is : Bright, Beautiful and soft hearted.
Umaler f Berber
Means "star of the peace" in Tamasheq, language of Tuareg people.
Umama f Arabic
Means "little mother" in Arabic, being a diminutive of the word أُمّ (ʾumm) "mother; origin, source". Umama bint Abi al-As, also called Umama bint Zaynab (died c. 685 AD), was a granddaughter of the Prophet Muhammad... [more]
Umâmê m & f Greenlandic
Variant of Umâmâκ.
Umaphon f Thai
Means "blessing of Uma" from Thai อุมา (uma) referring to the Hindu goddess Parvati and พร (phon) meaning "blessing".
Üməymə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Umama.
Umayma f Arabic
Means "little mother" in Arabic, from a diminutive of أم (ʾumm) meaning "mother". This was the name of an aunt of the Prophet Muhammad.
Umayra f Arabic
Feminine form of Umayr.
Umbelina f Portuguese, Italian (Rare)
Portuguese and Italian form of Ombeline.
Umberta f Italian
Feminine form of Umberto.
Umbra f Italian
Feminine form of Umbro. In some cases, however, it can also be a variant of Ombra.
Umeerinneq f & m Greenlandic
Younger form of Umêríneĸ.
Umehanae f Japanese
From Japanese Ume 梅 (plum) + Hana 花 (flower) + E 江 (river)
Umehisa f Japanese
Japanese feminine name derived from 梅 (ume) meaning "plum", 比 (hi) meaning "compare" and 沙 (sa) meaning "sand". This was the name of a geiko of Kamishichiken.
Umemi f Japanese
From Japanese 梅 (ume) meaning "plum" combined with 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Umeno f Japanese
From Japanese 梅 (ume) meaning "plum" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle. Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Umeo m & f Japanese
From Japanese 梅 (ume) meaning "plum" combined with 緒 (o) meaning "end of thread" (usually feminine) or 夫 (o) meaning "husband, man, manly" (usually masculine). Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Umeyu f Japanese
Japanese feminine name derived from 梅 (ume) meaning "plum" and 柚 (yu) meaning "citron". This is the name of a number of geikos.
Umiaktorvik m & f Inuit
Means "river" in Inuit.
Umihana f Bosnian
Bosnian feminine name possibly derived from the Arabic name Umm Hani or Umm-i-Hani, meaning "mother of Hani". In Islamic tradition this was an epithet of Fakhitah bint Abi Talib, a sister of Ali and cousin of Muhammad.... [more]
Umiitsuk f Greenlandic
Younger form of Umîtsuk.
Umika f Japanese
Variant of Umiko. A middle name bearer of this name is Gabriela Burgos “Bee”.
Umi Kalsom f Malay
Malay form of Umm Kulthum.
Umiko f Japanese (Modern)
Means "Child of the sea" in Japanese.
Umiltà f Italian
Italian form of Humilitas.
Umina f Japanese
From Japanese 海 (umi) meaning "sea, ocean" combined with 奈 (na) meaning "Nara(?)" or 那 (na), meaning "what" or 宇 (u) meaning "eaves, roof, house; heaven" combined with 美 (mi) meaning "beauty, beautiful" and 菜 (na), meaning "vegetable, greens; side dish" . Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Umito m & f Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (u) meaning "feathers", 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful" or 巳 (mi) meaning "sign of the snake" combined with 人 (to) meaning "person". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Umitzhan f & m Kazakh
From Kazakh үміт (ümit) meaning "hope" combined with жан (zhan) meaning "soul" (both of Persian origin).
Ummagulsun f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek umma refering to the global community of Muslims, and gulsun, a kind of jewellery with a hammered design.
Ummatoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek ummat refering to the community of Muslims and oy meaning "moon".
Umme f Arabic
Umme is an Indian name meaning “mother of sons”. Related names include Ummi and Umm.
Umm Habiba f Muslim (?)
Means "mother of Habiba" in Arabic. Notable bearer of the name is Umm Ḥabība Ramla bint Abī Sufyān, one of the wives of Muhammad.
Ummidia f Ancient Roman
A feminine name derived from the gentile name Ummidius.... [more]
Umm Salama f Muslim (?)
Means "mother of Salama" in Arabic. It is the kunya (a name derived from their first-born child) of Hind al-Makhzūmiyah.
Ümmü f Turkish
More modern variant of Ümmî.
Ummu f Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian variant of Umm.
Ummul-hanaa f Arabic
Means "mother of happiness" in Arabic.
Ümmüseleme f Turkish
Turkish form of Arabic name (kunya) Umm Salama, meaning "mother of Salama". Umm Salama Hind bint Abi Umayya was one of Muhammad's wives. Ümmüseleme Sultan was a daughter of Ahmed III (1673 - 1736).
Umrgulsun f Uzbek
Derived from umr meaning "life" and gulsun, a kind of jewellery with a hammered design.
Umri f Uzbek
Potentially derived from umri bilan bergan bo'lsin, a phrase said at the birth of Uzbek children which translates to "May he/she live long".