Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is masculine; and the first letter is S; and the length is 6.
gender
usage
letter
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Saabit m Arabic, Pakistani
Variant transcription of Thaabit.
Saadar m Odia
Means "respectful; respected" in Odia.
Saadia m Hebrew (Rare)
From Hebrew סעד‎ (sa'ad) meaning "to support", though it is sometimes considered a Hebrew form of the Arabic name Sa'id.
Saadiq m Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Sadiq.
Saahas m Indian
Sanskrit word 'Saahasam' meaning BRAVE and Courageous
Saahil m Indian
Means "seashore".
Saakam m Santali
Means "gift" in Santali.
Saalim m Dhivehi, Indian (Muslim)
Dhivehi and South Indian Muslim form of Salim.
Saamar m Sanskrit
* Saamar सामर- accompanied by immortals, accompanied by god. It is . Here स means with + अमर means god
Saamik f & m Greenlandic
Means "left hand" in Greenlandic.
Saaral f & m Mongolian
Means "grey, ashen" in Mongolian.
Saarav m Indian, Sanskrit, Hinduism, Hindi
MEANING - belonging or related to Sarayu river... [more]
Saaryn m Yakut
Means "one with a developed lower body, 'Don Juan', a favorite of women".
Saatan m Theology
Estonian form of Satan.
Säävaž m Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Saul.
Saayan m Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Malayalam, Gujarati, Marathi
MEANING : ( in astron.) with the precession or the longitude of a planet reckoned from the vernal equinoctial point
Sabary m Afro-American (Slavery-era)
Likely a transferred use of the surname.
Sabbar m Arabic
Means "frequently patient" in Arabic.
Sabbir m Bengali
Bengali variant of Sabir.
Sabeel m & f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic سبيل (see Sabil).
Sabhya m Indian
An Indian name meaning “refined, civilised”.
Sabihi m Arabic
From the Arabic صَبِيحَة (ṣabīḥa) meaning "morning" or صَبِيح‎ (ṣabīḥ) meaning "handsome, beautiful, pretty".
Sabijn f & m Dutch
Dutch form of both Sabinus and Sabina. However, in modern times, this name is found almost exclusively on females in The Netherlands... [more]
Sabola m Yao
Means "pepper" in Yao.
Saborí m Asturian
Asturian form of Saturninus.
Sabree m Malay
Malay variant of Sabri.
Sabrin m Romanian
Masculine form of Sabrina.
Sabtah m Biblical
Sabtah was a son of Cush according to Genesis 10:7, 1 Chronicles 1:9.
Səbuhi m Azerbaijani
From Arabic صبح (subh) meaning "morning, dawn". This was the pen name of Mirza Fatali Akhundov, a 19th-century Azerbaijani author and playwright.
Sabuka m Georgian
Diminutive of Saba 1.
Sabuna m Georgian (Rare)
Diminutive of Saba, as it contains the Georgian diminutive suffix -უნა (-una).
Sabzal m & f Balochi
Derived from sabz meaning "green".
Sachar m Biblical
Derived from the Hebrew verb שָׂכַר (sakhar) meaning "to hire". Sachar or Sacar was the name of two individuals mentioned in the Old Testament.
Sachio m Japanese
From 幸 (sachi) meaning "happiness, good luck" and 桜 (o) meaning "cherry (blossom) tree" or 雄 (o) meaning "male". This name can be formed with other kanji combinations as well.
Sachso m Old High German
Old High German cognate of Sasso and Saxi.
Sacred f & m African American (Modern, Rare)
From the English word sacred, meaning "made holy" or "solemn in a religious way".
Sacvan m American (Rare), English (Canadian, Rare)
Created from the first syllables of the surnames Sacco and Vanzetti... [more]
Sadaji m Japanese
From 禎 (sada) meaning "auspicious, divine grace, straight" or 定 (sada) meaning "determine, establish, decide" and 二 (ji) meaning "two". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Sadaka m Swahili
Means "a religious offering" in Swahili.
Sadamu m Japanese
From Japanese 質 (sadamu) meaning "characteristic, content", 成 (sadamu) meaning "to become" or from 莫 (sadamu) meaning "late, end, may not, must not be". Other kanji or kanji combinations can be used.
Saddek m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Algerian Arabic transcription of Sadiq.
Sadeep m Indian
From Indian meaning "eternity".
Sadiel m Spanish (Latin American)
some famous bearers include Sadiel Rojas and Sadiel Cuentas
Sadija m & f Bosnian
Bosnian male variant and feminine form of Sa'di.
Sadiki m Swahili
Means "believe" in Swahili.
Sadiki m Egyptian, Arabic, Swahili
Translating to “faithful” or “loyal,” it can always remind baby to stay dedicated to the people they love. Whether it’s through a ride-or-die friendship or sticking by their own beliefs, the name Sadiki is a constant reminder to keep a steadfast heart.
Sadire m Filipino
"pure" from Filipino dialect Ilocano.
Sadler m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Sadler.
Sadman m Bengali
Alternate transcription of Bengali সাদমান (see Shadman).
Sadmir m Bosnian
Probably derived from Samir 1.
Sadori m Sardinian
Short form of Salvadori.
Sadorn m Basque
Basque form of Saturn.
Sadoun m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic سعدون (see Sadun).
Sadwen m Welsh
Variant form of Sadwrn. This name was borne by a Welsh saint from the 6th century AD.
Sadwrn m Welsh
Welsh form of Saturnus (see Saturn).
Sadwyn m Welsh
Variant form of Sadwen. A known bearer of this name is Sadwyn Brophy (b. 1996), a New Zealand actor.
Sæbbe m Old Swedish
Old Swedish diminutive of Sæbiǫrn.
Sæbbi m Old Norse
Old Norse diminutive of Sǽbiǫrn.
Sae-bit f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From Bit prefixed with determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new."
Sae-bom f & m Korean (Modern)
From Bom prefixed with determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new."
Saeful m Indonesian
Indonesian form of Saiful.
Sægar m Anglo-Saxon
Original form of Segar derived from the elements "sea" and gar "spear" meaning "sea spear"... [more]
Sae-him m & f Korean (Modern, Rare)
From Him prefixed with determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new."
Saeida f & m Arabic
Means "HAPPY" in Arabic.
Sæmar m Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Derived from the Old Norse elements sær "sea" and mærr "famous".
Saemon m Japanese
Derived from 左衛門府 (Saemonfu), referring to a governmental department responsible for guarding, opening and closing the left gate to the royal palace. The name was classified as a hyakkanna (百官名), a court rank-style name that samurai used to announce oneself and give himself authority.
Saenal f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From native Korean 새날 (saenal) meaning "new day; new age/era," a combination of determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new" and 날 (nal) meaning "day, time."
Saepul m Indonesian
Indonesian form of Saiful.
Saeran m Popular Culture
This is the name of the fictional character Saeran Choi (mostly known as unknown) from the hit Korean otome game Mystic Messenger.
Særic m Anglo-Saxon
Derived from the Old English elements "sea" and ric "king, ruler".
Saero-i m & f Korean (Modern, Rare)
From adverb 새로이 (saero-i) meaning "renewedly," from the stem of adjective 새롭다 (saeropda) meaning "new" and the adverb-forming suffix 이 (i).... [more]
Saerok f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From adverb 새록새록 (saerok-saerok) which refers to a new thing popping up one after another.
Saerom f & m Korean (Modern)
Shortened from 새로움 (saeroum), the verbal noun of adjective 새롭다 (saeropda) meaning "new," a combination of determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new" and suffix —롭다 (-ropda), forming adjectives from abstract nouns (compare Saeron).
Saeron f & m Korean (Modern)
Shortened from Saeroun (compare Saerom). It can also be written with hanja, combining a sae hanja, e.g. 賽 meaning "exorcism," with a ron hanja, e.g. 綸 meaning "fishing line."... [more]
Saerop f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From the stem of adjective 새롭다 (saeropda) meaning "new," a combination of determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new" and suffix —롭다 (-ropda), forming adjectives from abstract nouns.
Saeros m Literature
Saeros is one of J. R. R. Tolkien's characters.
Sae-sol f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From Sol prefixed with determiner 새 (sae) meaning "new."
Sævar m Icelandic
Meaning "sea warrior", derived from the Old Norse elements sær "sea" and arr "warrior".
Sæwig m Anglo-Saxon
Derived from the Old English elements "sea" and wig "war, battle".
Safaat m Indonesian
Indonesian form of Shafaat.
Safari f & m Swahili, Bantu, American (Modern, Rare)
Means "journey" in Swahili, from Arabic سَفَر‎ (safar). It is commonly used by Eastern Bantus in Kenya, given to babies born when traveling or given in reference to a lot of traveling by a relative... [more]
Safdar m Persian, Urdu
Means "valiant, brave" in Persian.
Safeer m Arabic
Means "ambassador, mediator" in Arabic.
Safein f & m Khmer
Means "saffron" in Khmer.
Safere m Arthurian Cycle
A Knight of the Round Table.
Saffet m & f Turkish
Derived from Arabic صفوة (ṣafwa) meaning "elite, best, prime, pure".
Safidy m & f Malagasy
Means "choice" in Malagasy.
Safter m Crimean Tatar, Turkish (Rare)
Derived from Persian صافتر (sâftar) meaning "smooth, even", ultimately from صاف (sâf) meaning "flat, smooth, even".
Safuan m Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian form of Safwan.
Safwan m Arabic, Indonesian, Malay
Means "stones, rocks" or "pure, clean" in Arabic, ultimately from the root صفا (ṣafā) meaning "to be clear, to be pure". This was the name of two companions of the Prophet Muhammad.
Safwat m & f Arabic
Means "best, finest" in Arabic, from the word صَفَا (safa) meaning "pure, clear".
Sagara m Sanskrit, Sinhalese
Means "sea, ocean" in Sanskrit.
Saghir m Arabic, Urdu
Means "small, young" in Arabic.
Sagnik m Bengali
One who wins the fire
Sagris m Arthurian Cycle
In the Tristano Riccardiano and La Tavola Ritonda, a knight who, while visiting Mark’s court for healing, learned that Isolde had been abducted by Palamedes. He chased after them, but could not fight well because of his wounds, and was defeated.
Sâguaĸ m Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Sahala m & f Malagasy
Means "alike, the same" in Malagasy.
Sahala m Batak
Means "charisma, wisdom, power, authority" in Toba Batak.
Sahand m Persian
From the name of a volcanic mountain (etymology unknown) in northwestern Iran.
Sahaza m & f Malagasy
Means "fit, suitable" in Malagasy.
Sahban m Arabic
Means "companions, friends" in Arabic.
Şahbaz m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shahbaz.
Šahbaz m Bosnian
Bosnian form of Shahbaz.
Saheed m African American, African
In the Middle East, Saheed holds a special place within the region’s diverse cultural mosaic. It is embraced by countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Egypt, where it represents a deep connection to religious and spiritual beliefs... [more]
Şahînê m Kurdish
Kurdish form of Shahin.
Sáhkár m Northern Sami
Northern Sámi form of Sakari.
Şahlan m Karachay-Balkar
From the Persian شاه (shah) meaning "king" and Karachay-Balkar улан (ulan) meaning "son".
Şahlar m Azerbaijani
Means "kings, rulers" in Azerbaijani (the plural of şah, ultimately from Persian shah).
Sahmir m Arabic
Variant transcription of Samir 1.
Sahnan m Hebrew
Means "wise and peaceful"
Sahoto m Japanese
From Japanese 左 (sa) meaning "left", 方 (ho) meaning "direction" combined with 人 (to) meaning "person". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sahure m Ancient Egyptian
Means "he who is close to Re" in Egyptian.
Saichi m Japanese
From Japanese 沙 (sa) meaning "sand" combined with 一 (ichi) meaning "one". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Saidin m Malay, Indonesian
From Arabic سعيدين (saʿīdīn‎), the plural of سعيد (saʿīd) meaning "happy, lucky".
Saïdou m Western African
Form of Sa'id used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Saifan m & f Hebrew (Modern)
this name derives from the word: "סייף" meaning: "Safe(sword)" this is the Hebrew name of the flower "Gladiolus" and the hebrew name of the bird "Recurvirostra"
Saifol m Malay
Malay variant of Saiful.
Saihaj m & f Indian (Sikh)
It means "peaceful and equipoise person".
Saiken m Chinese Mythology
A kind of Chinese Yokai that literally means "rhinoceros dog".
Sailau m Kazakh
Means "choice, election" in Kazakh.
Saimir m Albanian
Masculine form of Saimira.
Saimon m Portuguese (Brazilian)
Portuguese form of Simon 1 based on the English pronunciation.
Saipul m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Saiful.
Saisai f & m Chinese
From Chinese 赛 (sài) meaning "competition, contest, match" combined with itself. Other character combinations can form this name as well.
Saiyin f & m Chinese
From the Chinese 赛 (sài) meaning "compete, contend" and 殷 (yīn) meaning "many, great, abundant, flourishing".
Sâjare m Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Sejer.
Sajmir m Albanian
Variant of Saimir.
Sakaki f & m Japanese
From Japanese 榊 (sakaki), the word for a flowering evergreen tree native to warm climates across Asia. The tree is considered sacred in the Shinto religion. The name was chosen for one of the main characters in the Japanese manga/anime series, Azumanga Daioh.
Sakari m Japanese
From 盛り (sakari), referring to a peak or height of something (e.g. the peak/height of summer) (compare Sakaru), also written as 昌, 壮, 隆 and such.
Sakari f & m African American (Modern)
Probably an invented name based on the sounds found in names such as Zakari, Safari, Shakari, Jakari, Makari and Dakari... [more]
Sakaru m Japanese (Rare)
From verb 盛る (sakaru) meaning "to prosper, flourish" (compare Sakari).... [more]
Sakata m Japanese
Sakata Meaning (Common Writing)... [more]
Sakhno m Ukrainian
Old Ukrainian folk form of Oleksandr.
Sakhon m & f Thai
Means "river, sea, ocean" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit सागर (sāgara).
Sakito m Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (saki) meaning "blossom" or 先 (saki) meaning "future" combined with 人 (to) meaning "person". Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Sakizo m Japanese (Rare)
From 咲 (saki) meaning "blossom" and 三 (zo) meaning "three". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sakkiz m Uzbek
Means "eight" in Uzbek.
Säkkri m Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Zachary.
Sakorn m & f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai สาคร (see Sakhon).
Sakris m Finnish (Rare)
A variant spelling Zachris.
Saksit m Thai
Means "holy, sacred" in Thai.
Sakula f & m Korean
From Korean Hangul 사쿠라 (sakula) meaning "cherry blossom", making it the Korean cognate of Sakura.
Sakuma m Japanese
From Japanese 佐 (sa) meaning "aid, help", 久 (ku) meaning "long time" combined with 馬 (ma) meaning "horse". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sakumi m & f Japanese
From Japanese 佐 (sa) meaning "aid, help", 玖 (ku) meaning "nine" combined with 三 (mi) meaning "three". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sakura m Western African (?)
Mansa Sakura, sixth mansa of the Mali Empire, was a famous bearer.... [more]
Sakuto m Japanese
From Japanese 朔 (saku) meaning "first day of lunar month" combined with 斗 (to), which refers to a Chinese constellation or 人 (to) meaning "person". Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Sakuya m & f Japanese, Japanese Mythology
As a unisex name, it can be used as 咲也, 咲哉, 咲弥, 朔夜 or 朔椰 with 咲 (shou, sa.ku, -zaki) meaning "bloom, blossom", 朔 (saku, tsuitachi) meaning "conjuction (astronomy), first day of the month", 也 (e, ya, ka, nari, mata) meaning "to be (archaic form)", 哉 (sai, kana, ya) meaning "alas, how, question mark, what", 弥 (bi, mi, amaneshi, iya, iyoiyo, tooi, hisashi, hisa.shii, ya, wata.ru) meaning "all the more, increasingly", 夜 (ya, yo, yoru) meaning "evening, night" and 椰 (ya, yashi) meaning "coconut tree."... [more]
Salahy m & f Malagasy
Means "sandpiper (bird)" in Malagasy.
Salama m & f Finnish
Means "lightning" in Finnish.
Salamo m Judeo-Catalan
Judeo-Catalan form of Solomon.
Salamu m Chechen
Derived from Arabic سَلَام (salām) meaning "peace".
Salaun m Breton, History
Breton form of Solomon (via Old Breton Salamun and Middle Breton Salavun)... [more]
Salbiy m Circassian
Derived from Arabic سَالَ (sāla) meaning "to flow, to run" (figuratively meaning "brook, stream, creek") combined with the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master".
Sálbmo m Sami
Sami form of Salmo.
Salekh m Adyghe
Adyghe form of Salih.
Salesi m Tongan
Tongan form of Charles.
Salesi m Romansh
Romansh form of Sales, traditionally found in the Surselva region.
Salğin m Shor
Means "wind" in Shor.
Salgra m Garo, Far Eastern Mythology
Salgra is the Sun God in Garo Mythology.
Salikh m Tatar, Bashkir
Tatar and Bashkir form of Salih.
Saliou m Western African
Form of Salih used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Sallan m Hausa
Means "born on a feast day" in Hausa.
Sallau m Hausa
From the Hausa sallā̀ meaning “prayer, religious holiday”.
Salleh m Malay
Malay form of Salih.
Salmah m Biblical
Variant of Salmon.
Salmai m Biblical, Hebrew
Form of Shalmai used in some versions of the Old Testament.
Sálmmo m Sami
Variant of Sálmo.
Salmon m Biblical Hebrew
He is the son of Nahshon, and married Rahab, possibly she of Jericho, by whom he had Boaz... [more]
Salnis m Latvian (Rare)
Either derived from Latvian salna "fost, frostiness" or from Latvian salnis "roan (the color)".
Saloum m Arabic, Western African
Alternate transcription of Arabic سلوم (see Salum).
Salsal f & m Arabic (Rare)
"Pure Water", "Clay"... [more]
Salter m English
Transferred use of the occupational surname Salter.
Salvín m Aragonese (Rare)
Aragonese form of Salvinus.
Sálvio m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Salvius.
Salwan m Arabic (Mashriqi)
Means "comfort, consolation, solace" in Arabic.
Samaël m Dutch, French
Dutch and French form of Samael.
Samang f & m Thai
Means "good-looking, beautiful" in Thai.
Samara m Arabic
Means "to talk in the evening" in Arabic.
Samart m Thai
Alternate transcription of Samat.
Samawi m & f Arabic
Means "celestial" or "sky blue" in Arabic.
Sambaa m & f Mongolian (Rare)
Means "skill, readiness, quick wit" in Mongolian.
Šambay m Balochi
Means "Saturday" in Balochi.
Sambid m Hinduism, Nepali
a form of the word 'Vidya' which means wisdom/knowledge. Sum is a prefix which makes it a positive wisdom, wise, knowledgable person defined as sambid. For further reference, look into a Nepali,Hindi,Sanskrit dictionary.
Sambór m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Sambor.
Sambor m Polish (Archaic)
Means "to fight alone" or "alone in battle", derived from Slavic sam "alone, lone, lonely" combined with Slavic bor "battle" or borit "to fight".
Sambuu m Buryat
Means "good" in Buryat.
Samdup m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan བསམ་གྲུབ (bsam-grub) meaning "fulfillment (of one's desires or wishes)".
Sameen m & f Arabic, Persian, Urdu
Arabic variant form (or simplified transcription) of Thameen and Persian and Urdu form of Thameen. Also compare the Arabic feminine name Samina.... [more]
Sameli m Finnish
Variant of Samuel.
Samere m Shona
Shona form of Samuel.
Sameri m Biblical (Hellenized)
Variant transcription of Shimri, as used in 1 Chronicles 11:45.... [more]
Samero m Shona
Shona form of Samuel.
Samesh m Hindi
Meaning "equal to a lord", from Sanskrit साम्य (samya) meaning "equality" and ईश (isha) meaning "lord, ruler"
Sameth m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Sameth.
Samiel m Judeo-Catalan
Judeo-Catalan form of Samuel.
Samini f & m Aymara
Means "happy, lucky" in Aymara.
Samiri m Arabic
Arabic form of Zimri.
Samkad m Bontoc
Meaning unknown.
Samlet m Welsh (Rare, Archaic)
The name of an obscure Welsh saint, remembered in the village and parish of Llansamlet in Glamorgan.
Sammee f & m English
Variant spelling of Sammy.
Sammel m Scots, Medieval Dutch
Scots and medieval Dutch form of Samuel.
Sammer m Muslim
Probably a variant of Samir 1. The spelling might be influenced by the German surname Sammer borne by two famous football players (Klaus and Matthias Sammer, father and son)
Sammir m Arabic
Variant of Samir 1.
Sámmol m Northern Sami
Northern Sámi form of Samuel.
Sammye f & m English
Alternate spelling of Sammy.
Samoel m Georgian (Rare)
Georgian form of Samuel. This name was borne by eight Catholicoi of Caucasian Iberia: the first lived in the 5th century AD, the last in the 9th century AD.
Samoyl m Russian (Archaic), Belarusian (Archaic), Ukrainian (Archaic)
East Slavic archaic variant of Samuel. See related surname Samoylov.
Sampat m Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, Kannada
From Sanskrit सम्पद् (sampad) meaning "success, wealth, prosperity".
Samphy f & m Khmer
Means "hard-working" in Khmer.
Sampsa m Finnish Mythology, Finnish
Finnish variant of Sampson 1. In Finnish mythology Sampsa Pellervoinen was a god of fertility, fields and crops.
Samraj m Indian, Tamil
From Sanskrit सम्राज् (samrā́j) meaning "supreme ruler, universal king" (itself from the prefix सम्- (sam-) meaning "altogether" and‎ राज (rāja) meaning "king")... [more]
Samran m & f Thai
Means "happy, joyful" in Thai.
Samrat m Indian, Bengali
Derived from Sanskrit सम्राट् (samrat) meaning "emperor, sovereign".
Samric m English
Variant of Sameric.
Sámson m Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Samson.
Samsón m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Samson.
Šəmšun m Northeastern Neo-Aramaic
Northeastern Neo-Aramaic form of Samson.
Samtan m & f Tibetan, Ladakhi
Alternate transcription of Tibetan བསམ་གཏན (see Samten).
Samten m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From 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]
Samual m English
Variant of Samuel.
Samúel m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Samuel.
Samùél m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Samuel.
Samuèl m Provençal
Provençal form of Samuel.
Samuru m Japanese
"strength" (samu-), "protection" (-mu), or "warrior" (-ru).
Samuyӑl m Chuvash
Chuvash form of Samuil.
Samzun m Breton
Breton form of Samson. Sant Samzun (known as Saint Samson of Dol in English, born c. late 5th century) is counted among the seven founder saints of Brittany.
Sanaka m Hinduism
Means "old, ancient" in Sanskrit. In Hindu mythology this is the name of one of the four Kumaras, a group of child sages who are the firstborn sons of the god Brahma.
Sanari m Tamil
A name derived from Sri Lanka/ South India. Means Deceitful and/or Sweet
Sanath m Hindi
Lord Brahma, Eternal, Accompanied by a protector
Sanche m Medieval French
French form of Sancho.
Sancus m Roman Mythology
Derived from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂k-, meaning "to sanctify". This was the name of the god of trust, honesty and oaths in Roman mythology.
Sandër m Albanian
Truncated form of Aleksandër.
Sandey m & f English
Variant of Sandy.
Sandis m Latvian
Short form of Aleksandrs, now used as a given name in its own right.
Sandon m Ancient Greek
Sandon was an Orphic philosopher and son of Hellanikos.
Šandor m Croatian (Rare)
Croatian form of Sándor. A famous bearer was Croatian writer Ksaver Šandor Gjalski (1854-1935).
Sandor m Banat Swabian
Banatswabian borrowing of Sándor.
Sandor m Literature
The name of a character in George R.R. Martin's novels A Song of Ice and Fire. Presented without the accent commonly used in the Hungarian spelling, but likely derived from the same. Most likely a form of Alexander, meaning "defender of man."
Sandre m & f French (Rare), Provençal
Short form of Alexandre and Aleissandre for men and French form of Sandra for women.... [more]
Sandro m Spanish
Diminutive of Alejandro.
Sangar m Kurdish
Means "protection" in Kurdish.
Sangat m & f Thai
Means "tranquil, peaceful, quiet" in Thai.
Sangay m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan སེང་གེ (seng-ge) meaning "lion".
Sangey m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan སེང་གེ (see Sangay).
Sangha m Khmer
Means "handsome" in Khmer.
Sangho m Korean
From 相 "mutual, reciprocal, each other" and 鎬 "stove; bright".
Sang-ki m Korean
The name 'Sang-ki' has its origins in Korea, a country rich in history and culture. The earliest known use of this name dates back to ancient times, when it was commonly given to boys as a symbol of strength and resilience... [more]
Sangop m & f Thai
Means "peaceful, calm, quiet" in Thai.
Sangpo m Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan བཟང་པོ (see Zangpo).
Sang-uk m Korean
From Sino-Korean 上 (sang) meaning "top, best, first" and 旭 (uk) meaning "rising sun".
Sangye m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan སངས་རྒྱས (sangs-rgyas) referring to the Buddha, derived from སངས (sangs) meaning "purified, cleansed" and རྒྱས (rgyas) meaning "extended, spread".