This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is masculine; and the ending sequence is en.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Saken m KazakhDerived from Arabic سَاكِن
(sākin) meaning "inhabitant, resident".
Samten m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan བསམ་གཏན
(bsam-gtan) meaning "meditative concentration, stable attention, awareness", derived from བསམ
(bsam) meaning "thought, thinking" and གཏན
(gtan) meaning "constant, perpetual"... [
more]
Sarsen m KazakhDerived from Kazakh сәрсенбі
(sarsenbi) meaning "Wednesday", ultimately from Persian چهارشنبه
(chaharshanbeh), traditionally given to boys born on a Wednesday.
Savinien m FrenchFrench form of
Sabinianus. Savinien de Cyrano de Bergerac, a French author and the inspiration for Edmond Rostand’s most famous drama
Cyrano de Bergerac, is a bearer of this name.
Sen m & f JapaneseDerived from the Japanese kanji 亘 (
sen) meaning "span; request" or 仙 (
sen) referred to a sage, a hermit or an enlightened person or 千 (
sen) meaning "thousand".... [
more]
Sen m & f ChineseDerived from the Chinese character 森 (
sēn, shēn) meaning "full of trees; dense" but also "dark; gloomy; cold".... [
more]
Servilien m FrenchFrench form of
Servilianus. This name is mostly used in French-speaking parts of Africa. A known bearer of this name is Servilien Nzakamwita (b. 1943), bishop of the Rwandese city Byumba.
Seth-Peribsen m Ancient EgyptianEtymology uncertain. Probably from Egyptian
stẖ-prj-sn, perhaps meaning "the brother comes forth to Seth", from Egyptian
prj "to come forth" combined with
sn "brother" combined with the Egyptian God
Seth 2... [
more]
Sezen f & m TurkishMeans "sensing, one who senses" in Turkish.
Shailen m HindiA Hindi name meaning 'king of mountains'. One notable bearer is Shailen Bhatt, the administrator of the American Federal Highway Administration.
Shaofen m & f ChineseFrom 少 (
shǎo) meaning "few, little" and 芬 (
fēn) meaning "fragrance, aroma".
Shaozhen f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
绍 (shào) meaning "continue, join" and
珍 (zhēn) meaning "precious, valuable, rare".
Shen m ChineseMeans “deep thinker”, “deep thought”, or “spirit” in Chinese. According to Chinese beliefs, it is the spiritual part of the human psyche.
Shengzhen f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
胜 (shèng) meaning "victory, excel" and
珍 (zhēn) meaning "precious, valuable, rare".
Shien f & m JapaneseThe kanji used for females is 梓 (shi) meaning "Japanese cherry birch" combined with 苑 (en) meaning "pasture, park, garden". Other kanji combinations are possible. ... [
more]
Shiken m JapaneseFrom Japanese 思 (shi) meaning "think" combined with 軒 (ken) meaning "carriage". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Shingen m JapaneseFrom 森 (
shin) meaning "forest, woods" and 厳 (
gen) meaning "stern, strict". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Shiwen f & m ChineseFrom Chinese 诗
(shī) meaning "poetry, poem, verse" or 士
(shì) meaning "scholar, gentleman, warrior, knight" combined with 文
(wén) meaning "literature, culture, writing" or 雯
(wén) meaning "cloud patterns"... [
more]
Shkëlzen m AlbanianDerived from Albanian
shkëlzen "to shine; to glow; to glint".
Shungen m JapaneseFrom 春 (
shun) meaning "spring season" and 現 (
gen) meaning "existing, present". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Shuwen f & m ChineseFrom Chinese 叔
(shū) meaning "clear, pure, good, virtuous" or 书
(shū) meaning "book" combined with 文
(wén) meaning "literature, culture, writing"... [
more]
Shuzhen f & m ChineseFrom Chinese 淑
(shū) meaning "good, pure, virtuous, charming" or 抒
(shū) meaning "to relieve, to ease" or "to express" combined with 珍
(zhēn) meaning "precious, rare" or 真
(zhēn) meaning "real, genuine, true"... [
more]
Solen m & f BretonBreton variant of
Solène used as both a masculine and feminine name.
Songzhen f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
颂 (sòng) meaning "laud, acclaim, hymn, ode" and
珍 (zhēn) meaning "precious, valuable, rare".
Sten m Soviet, Russian (Rare)Combination of the surnames of Сталин
(Stalin) and Энгельс
(Engels), which refer to Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) and Friedrich Engels (1820-1895). This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Sten m EstonianEven though this name was originally an adoption of Swedish
Sten, this name is now considered a variant of
Stefan in Estonia.
Sulien m Breton, Welsh, Celtic MythologyDerived from the Celtic name
Sulgen meaning "born from the sun". This was the name of a Celtic sun god. It was borne by several early saints.
Sunren m ChineseFrom Chinese 孙
(sūn) meaning "grandchild, descendant" combined with 仁
(rén) meaning "compassionate", 人
(rén) meaning "man, person, mankind, people" or 任
(rèn) meaning "burden, responsibility, duty"... [
more]
Suwen f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
愫 (sù) meaning "guileless, sincere, honest" or
苏 (sū) meaning "revive, resurrect" or a species of thyme and
文 (wén) meaning "literature, culture, writing" or
雯 (wén) meaning "cloud patterns".
Takaken m JapaneseMeaning "tall and strong", from Japanese (taka) "tall", combined with (ken) "strong".
Tansen m IndianName of Mian Tansen, father of Indian classical music.
Taseen m Bengali (Muslim, Rare)Taseen is a Quranic name for boys. Chapter 27 of the Quran (known as Surat an-Naml) begins with Taseen, just like Chapter 36 begins with Yaseen and chapter 20 starts with Taha. The meaning of these words are not known, but since they are in the Quran in the beginning of Quranic chapters, people use them as names.
Tashen m SinhaleseSinhala variation of Tashan (तशन) which is of Hindi origin meaning style, flair, attitude, or swagger.
Taven m & f Kurdish, UzbekMeans "spring rain" in Kurdish and/or "healthy, strong" in Uzbek.
Tayven m AmericanTayven means a strong and dashing young man who is very good at basketball and fortnite, but mostly is very good with the ladies
Temren m TurkishMeans "pointy tip of a spear or arrow" in Turkish.
Tessen m & f JapaneseMeans "iron fan" in Japanese. It is a Japanese hand fan used as a weapon or for signaling.
Tetsuden m Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 哲 (
tetsu) meaning "philosophy, clear" or 鉄 (
tetsu) meaning "iron" combined with 伝 (
den), meaning "communicate, transmit, legend, tradition". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Thameen m ArabicDerived from the Arabic adjective ثـَمين
(thameen) or
(thamyn) meaning "precious, (in)valuable" as well as "costly, expensive".... [
more]
Thaoughweanjawegen m OneidaOf uncertain etymology. The name Thaoughweanjawegen was a ceremonial name given to Col. John Harper (1734-1811) by an Oneida sachem who adopted him. Harper led a corp of frontier rangers and Oneida scouts during the early years of the Revolutions New York border war... [
more]
Théoden m LiteratureMeans "king, ruler" in Old English, probably from
þeud "people" and
þegen "thane, warrior" This name was invented by J. R. R. Tolkien who used Old English to represent the Rohirric language... [
more]
Thiên m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 天
(thiên) meaning "sky, heaven".
Thiện m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 善
(thiện) meaning "good, kind, moral".
Thupten m & f TibetanFrom Tibetan ཐུབ་བསྟན
(thub-bstan) meaning "teachings of the Buddha, Buddhist doctrine", derived from ཐུབ
(thub) referring to the
Buddha and བསྟན
(bstan) meaning "instruction, teachings".
Thuyên m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 詮
(thuyên) meaning "explain, discuss, comment" or 銓
(thuyên) meaning "estimate, select".
Tiến m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 進
(tiến) meaning "advance, march forward".
Tiễn m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 諓 (
tiễn) meaning "flattering", 羡 (
tiển) meaning "to envy, to admire, to exceed", or 踐 (
tiễn) meaning "to trample, promise".
Tjorven m & f German (Modern, Rare)This was the nickname of a character called Maria in Astrid Lindgren's "We on Salt-Crow Island" (1964). It is not exactly known what Lindgren based the nickname on, but she might have based it on Swedish
tjock meaning "thick" combined with
korv meaning "sausage"... [
more]
Tlilquen m NahuatlMeans "black garment", from Nahuatl
tliltic "black" and
quemitl "garments, clothing; ritual vestments".
Tōken m JapaneseFrom Japanese 桐 (tō) meaning "the paulownia tree" combined with 軒 (ken) meaning "carriage". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tolegen m KazakhMeans "paid" in Kazakh, from төлеу
(toleu) meaning "to pay". This name was traditionally given to a newborn son after the death of another male relative (as in, the parents were "paid" with a son in return for the family member's passing).
Tongzhen f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
彤 (tóng) meaning "red, vermilion" and
珍 (zhēn) meaning "precious, valuable, rare" or
真 (zhēn) meaning "clearly, really" or "real, true".
Tören m & f TurkishMeans "ceremony, celebration" in Turkish.
Torrhen m LiteratureThe name of a character in George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. In this world Torrhen Stark was the King in the North who knelt to Aegon the Conquerer.
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]
Truyền m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 傳 (
truyền) meaning "to pass to, to pass down".
Tseden m & f MongolianFrom Tibetan ཚེ་ལྡན
(tshe ldan) meaning "alive, living; venerable", from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and ལྡན
(ldan) meaning "to possess; to be devoted to".
Tsengeldüüren m & f MongolianMeans "full of joy" in Mongolian, from цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "celebration, merrymaking, happiness" and дүүрэн
(düüren) meaning "full, complete".
Tseren m & f Kalmyk, MongolianKalmyk and Mongolian form of
Tshering. It is solely used as a masculine name in Kalmykia while it is unisex in Mongolia.
Tsheten m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan ཚེ་བརྟན
(tshe-brtan) meaning "stable life, tenacious life", derived from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and བརྟན
(brtan) meaning "stable, firm, steadfast".
Tsovoosergelen m & f Mongolian (Rare)From Mongolian цовоо
(tsovoo) meaning "alert, intelligent, vivacious, dexterous" and сэргэлэн
(sergelen) meaning "alert, adroit, bright".
Tujen m BretonDerived from Breton
tut "people" and
gen "birth".
Tümen m & f Mongolian, YakutMeans "ten thousand, multitude, myriad" or "people, nation" in Mongolian and Yakut, the attributive form of Mongolian түм
(tüm). Among the Mongol and Turkic peoples, a
tümen (
tumen in English) was historically also a social and military unit of 10,000 households and soldiers.... [
more]
Tuyên m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 宣 (
tuyên) meaning "to declare, announce, command".
Tuyền m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 璇 (
tuyền) meaning "fine jade" or 暶 (
tuyền) meaning "bright, beautiful".
Tzeren m KalmykMeans "long Life," most likely from Tibetan ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life."
Ugyen m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom 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.
Üitümen m & f MongolianMeans "million" or "innumerable, multitude" in Mongolian, from үй
(üi) "many" and түм
(tüm) meaning "ten thousand, myriad, multitude", or "people, nation".
Ülgen m TengrismÜlgen is a Turkic and Mongolian creator-deity, usually distinct from Tengri but sometimes identified with him in the same manner as
Helios and
Apollo... [
more]
Urizen m LiteratureThis name was invented by the English mystic poet William Blake, who intended it to be a pun on
your reason and perhaps also based it on Greek
horizein (root of the English word
horizon) meaning "bound, limit, divide, separate"... [
more]
Uten f & m JapaneseFrom Japanese 雨天 (uten) meaning "wet weather; rainy weather". Other kanji or kanji combinations can form this name as well.
Üzemsüren f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian үзэм
(üzem) meaning "grape, raisin" and Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity".