This is a list of submitted names in which the pattern is *n or *s.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Sagrado Corazón f & m Spanish (Rare)Means "sacred heart" in Spanish, referring to the sacret heart of Jesus (hence
de Jesús is often suffixed in the full name).
Sagris m Arthurian CycleIn 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.
Şahıhuban f Ottoman TurkishFrom Ottoman Turkish "the queen of beauties":
şah - "shah (queen)" and
hûban - "beauties" (plural form of Persian word
hub - "beauty", "beautiful")
Şahlan m Karachay-BalkarFrom the Persian
شاه (shah) meaning "king" and Karachay-Balkar
улан (ulan) meaning "son".
Saichon f & m ThaiFrom Thai สาย
(sai) meaning "steam, current" and ชล
(chon) meaning "water".
Saidfarmon m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
said meaning "fortunate" and
farmon meaning "order, decree".
Saidin m Malay, IndonesianFrom Arabic سعيدين
(saʿīdīn), the plural of سعيد
(saʿīd) meaning "happy, lucky".
Saidjahon m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
said meaning "fortunate" and
jahon meaning "the world".
Saido'lmas m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
said meaning "fortunate" and
o'lmas meaning "undying, eternal".
Saidomon m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
said meaning "fortunate" and
omon meaning "safe, healthy" or "mercy".
Saidoxun m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
said meaning "fortunate" and
oxun(d) meaning "theologian, person with high religious authority" or "intelligent man".
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"
Saikhanchuluun m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome" and чулуун
(chuluun) meaning "stone".
Sainbuyan m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian сайн
(sain) meaning "good" and буян
(buyan) meaning "good deed, virtue, charity" or "fortune, blessing".
Saiphin f ThaiFrom Thai สาย
(sai) meaning "line, wire, string" and พิณ
(phin) referring to a stringed instrument used in India and northern Thailand.
Saiyan f ChineseFrom the Chinese
赛 (sài) meaning "compete, contend" and
燕 (yàn) meaning "swallow (bird)" or
琰 (yǎn) meaning "gem, jewel, glitter of gems".
Saiyin f & m ChineseFrom the Chinese
赛 (sài) meaning "compete, contend" and
殷 (yīn) meaning "many, great, abundant, flourishing".
Sajin m Japanese? ; Sajin Komamura is a character in the 2nd worlds most popular manga ' Bleach ' by Tite Kubo .
Sakalas m Lithuanian (Rare)Derived from the Lithuanian noun
sakalas meaning "falcon". This word is not to be confused with the Lithuanian noun
šakalas meaning "jackal".
Saken m KazakhDerived from Arabic سَاكِن
(sākin) meaning "inhabitant, resident".
Sakhon m & f ThaiMeans "river, sea, ocean" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit सागर
(sāgara).
Sakon m JapaneseThis name is used as 左近 with 左 (sa, sha, hidari) meaning "left" and 近 (kin, kon, chika.i) meaning "akin, early, near, tantamount."... [
more]
Salaman m GermanicThe meaning and origin of the first element in this Germanic name is rather uncertain, and so there are various possibilities to the name's meaning. The most likely possibility is that the first element is derived from Old High German
salo "black." Other possibilities are
sal "house, living room" and Gothic
sêls "kind, friendly." The second element is derived from
man "man."
Salas f Spanish (European, Rare)Means "halls, rooms" in Spanish. It is from a devotional title of the Virgin Mary,
Nuestra Señora de Salas, meaning "Our Lady of the Halls". This is the name of a hermitage in Huesca, Spain.
Salatın f AzerbaijaniFrom Arabic سلاطين
(salāṭīn) meaning "sultans", the plural of سلطان
(sulṭān).
Sales m German (Rare, Archaic), Spanish (Rare)From the surname
Sales, borne by the Roman Catholic saint Francis de Sales. Used mostly as a second name to
Franz in Germany and Austria, deprecated in Germany in the 20th century because of its surname nature.
Saliman m LiteratureUsed by Australian author Alison Croggon in her 'Pellinor' series of fantasy novels, in which the character Saliman of Turbansk was a friend of Maerad, Hem/Cai and Cadvan. It may be a variant transcription of
Suleiman.
Sallustian m EnglishEnglish form of
Sallustianus. This was the name of a saint who was apparently especially venerated on the island of Sardinia.
Sallustius m Ancient RomanPossibly derived from (or otherwise etymologically related to) Latin
sallere "to salt, to preserve with salt" or from Latin
saliō "to leap, to jump, to spring". There have been several bearers of this name throughout history, such as Gaius Sallustius Crispus, a Roman historian from the 1st century BC.
Salmann m Icelandic (Rare)Derived from Old Norse
salr "hall, house" and
maðr "person, man" (genitive
manns). Alternatively this could be an Icelandic form of a German name in which the first element is derived from Old High German
salo "dirty gray" (related to English
sallow and Old Norse
sölr "dirty yellow").... [
more]
Salnis m Latvian (Rare)Either derived from Latvian
salna "fost, frostiness" or from Latvian
salnis "roan (the color)".
Salus f Roman MythologyMeans "health, safety" in Latin. This was the name of the Roman goddess of safety and well-being, sometimes equated to her Greek counterpart
Hygieia.
Saman m PersianMeans "order, arrangement, disposition" in Persian.
Saman m SinhaleseMeaans "jasmine" or "union, association" in Sinhalese. This is the name of a Buddhist deity worshipped in Sri Lanka.
Saman f PersianShort form of the name Yasmin (said Yasmin or Yasaman in farsi), which refers to the jasmine flower. The name is also referenced in the Hafez 'Fal' poem book, popularly used in Persian culture during Nowruz, to tell fortunes, and for picking baby names.
Saman m ThaiMeans "to connect, to unite" in Thai.
Samaritan m ObscureFrom the word
Samaritan, referring to the people of Samaria. In the Bible, Luke 10:25-37 tells the parable of the Good Samaritan, where a Samaritan man helped another man who had been robbed... [
more]
Samhain m & f English (Modern, Rare), Scottish (Modern, Rare)From Irish and Scottish Gaelic
Samhain, referring to the Gaelic festival, marking the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter, which is celebrated on the evening of 31st October and 1st November.
Samin m & f Indonesian, Persian, Bengali, UrduDerived from Arabic ثمين
(thamin) meaning "valuable, precious". It is a unisex name in Iran, Bangladesh and Pakistan while it is solely masculine in Indonesia.
Samon m JapaneseThis name combines 左 (sa, sha, hidari) meaning "left", 沙 (sa, sha, suna, yonageru) meaning "sand" or 佐 (sa) meaning "assistant, help" with 門 (mon, kado, to) meaning "gate."... [
more]
Samos m Ancient GreekThis name was borne by a Macedonian lyric and epigrammatic poet of the late 3rd century BC.
Samphas f & m KhmerMeans "perception, sensation, contact" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit स्पर्श
(sparsha).
Samphoss f & m KhmerMeans "perception, sensation, contact" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit स्पर्श
(sparsha).
Sam-sun f KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 三 "three" and 顺 "obey, submit to, go along with". It is also translated as "third daughter".
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]
Samudravarman m Sanskrit, HistoryFrom Sanskrit
समुद्र (
samudra) "sea, ocean" and
वर्मन् (
varman) "armor, protection". This was the name of a ruler of Kamarupa from 374 to 398 AD.
Samuelus m LiteratureThis was the name of one of the characters in The Cats of Ulthar by H. P. Lovecraft.
Samzun m BretonBreton 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.
Sản m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 產 (
sản) meaning "to produce" or 㦃 (
sản) meaning "perfect character, many, plenty".
San f JapaneseThis name is used as 三 (san, zou, mi, mi'.tsu, mi.tsu) meaning "three."... [
more]
San m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 山
(san) meaning "mountain".
San f & m BurmeseMeans "model, standard, ideal" or "to enjoy, to take delight in" in Burmese.
Sanan m KalmykPossibly from Kalmyk санх
(sankh) meaning "to think, to meditate".
Sanan m ThaiMeans "loud, resounding, reverberating" in Thai.
Sanctan m Manx (Archaic)Saint Sanctan was a 6th-century Manx bishop who is said to have been a disciple of Saint
Patrick, though this is chronologically impossible.
Sanctinus m Late RomanDiminutive of
Sanctius, as is evidenced by the suffix
-inus. This was the name of a French saint from the 4th century AD.
Sancus m Roman MythologyDerived from Proto-Indo-European
*seh₂k-, meaning "to sanctify". This was the name of the god of trust, honesty and oaths in Roman mythology.
Sandocus m Greek MythologyPossibly derived from Old Persian
Sandauka. In Greek mythology, Sandocus travelled from Syria to Cilicia (in modern-day Turkey) to found the city of Celenderis... [
more]
Sandokan m LiteratureSandokan is titular character in some tales later collected in a book series started with the first book 'Le tigri di Mompracem' (1900) written by Emilio Salgari (1862-1911). The name is most likely inspired by Sandakan, a city in Malaysia which means "the place that was pawned" in Suluk language.
Sandris m LatvianOriginally a short form of Aleksandrs, now used as a given name in its own right.
Sandugas' f MariDerived from the Tatar
сандугач (sandugach) meaning "nightingale".
Sandwin m GermanicDerived from Gothic
sanths "true, real" combined with Old High German
wini "friend."
Sang-Hyeon m & f KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 相
(sang) meaning "mutual, together" or 祥
(sang) meaning "good luck, good omen" combined with 炫
(hyeon) meaning "shine, glitter", 現
(hyeon) meaning "current, present", 賢
(hyeon) meaning "virtuous, worthy, able" or 鉉
(hyeon), which refers to a device used to lift a tripod cauldron... [
more]
Sangiban m AncientSangiban is the name of a king of the Alans in the 5th century.
Sangjun m KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 相 "mutual, reciprocal, each other", 瑞 "felicitous omen; auspicious". or 想 "think, speculate, plan, consider" and 俊 "talented, capable; handsome".
Sangluan f ChineseFrom the Chinese
桑 (sāng) meaning "mulberry tree" and
鸾 (luán), a fabulous mythological bird.
Sanguan m & f ThaiMeans "to conserve, to preserve" in Thai.
Sangwan f & m ThaiRefers to a type of chain made of diamonds or gold that is worn from both shoulders across the breast. This transcription represents two different spellings: สังวาล, which is solely feminine, and สังวาลย์, which is masculine (and occasionally feminine).
Sann m KhmerMeans "peaceful, quiet, comfortable" in Khmer.
Sannyrion m Ancient GreekMost likely derived from the Greek verb σαννυρίζω
(sannyrizo) or
(sannurizo) meaning "to jeer, to mock", which is ultimately derived from the Greek noun σάννας
(sannas) meaning "idiot, fool, zany"... [
more]
Sanon f JapaneseFrom Japanese 砂 (sa) meaning "sand" or 桜 (sa) meaning "cherry blossom" combined with 音 (non) meaning "sound". Other kanji combinations are possible as well.
Sansarsaikhan m MongolianFrom Mongolian сансар
(sansar) meaning "space, cosmos" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".
Sapharin m Arthurian CycleA Saxon king who served King Aminaduc, invading northern Britain at the beginning of Arthur’s reign.
Saquon m African AmericanSaquon is of Swahili origins and means “warrior”. A notable bearer is Philadelphia Eagles running back, Saquon Barkley.
Saradas m LiteratureSaradas was the third son of Gorbadoc Brandybuck and Mirabella Took. His siblings were Rorimac (who was the grandfather of Merry), Amaranth, Dodinas, Asphodel, Dinodas, and Primula (who was the mother of Frodo Baggins).
Sarajon f UzbekDerived from
sara meaning "best" and
jon meaning "spirit, soul".
Saraman m GermanicDerived from Old High German
saro "armor" combined with
man "man."
Saran f KoreanFrom Korean word 사랑 (sarang) meaning "love, affection." Also, from 紗(sa) meaning "silk" and 蘭(ran) meaning "orchid". Other hanja character combinations can also form this name.