Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the pattern is *y* or a* or c* or e* or i* or k* or o* or r* or t* or u*.
gender
usage
pattern
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Quaylyn m African American (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a combination of the phonetic elements qua, ay and lyn.
Quday m & f Kazakh
Kazakh word for God, ultimately derived from the Persian name Khuda.
Qudratoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek qudrat meaning "strength, power" and oy meaning "moon".
Queeney f English
Variant of Queenie.
Quelly f Brazilian (Rare)
Brazilian variant of Kelly.
Quenby f & m English
Transferred use of the surname Quenby.
Quentyn m English, Literature
Variant of Quentin. Used in George R. R. Martin's 'A Song of Ice and Fire' series.
Quenya m American
Possibly a variant of Kenya or Quinn.
Quenyazton f & m Nahuatl
Possibly means "how will she go?", from Nahuatl quen "how? what? in what manner?" and yaz "will go", combined with the diminutive suffix -ton.
Quenzy f Obscure (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Kenzie.
Querly f Dogri
Means "quick" in Dogri.
Quetcy f American (Hispanic, Rare)
Borne by Quetcy Alma Martínez De Jesús (1956-), a Puerto Rican child singer of the 1960s and 1970s who was based in New York City. Her name may be a derivative of Quetzalli.
Quhyar m Old Persian
Was the last ruler of the Karenid dynasty (in modern Iran), ruling briefly in 839 until his assassination.
Quigley m & f English (Rare), Popular Culture
Transferred use of the surname Quigley.
Quilindschy m Obscure
In the case of Dutch soccer player Quilindschy Hartman (2001-), it is a combination of Quirine (the name of his sister) and Lindschy (possibly a Dutch form of Lindsay).
Quimby m & f American (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Quimby.
Quindolyn f English
Combination of Quinn and Gwendolyn.
Quinley f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Quinley or a combination of Quin and lee.
Quinlyn f & m English
Variant spelling of Quinlan.
Quinlynne f English
Feminine form of Quinlan.
Quinncey f & m Obscure (Rare)
Variant of Quincey, likely inspired by Quinn.
Quinnlyn f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Feminine variant of Quinlan, influenced by Quinn and the popular name suffix lyn.
Quinny m & f English
Diminutive of Quinn.
Quiryn m Medieval Dutch
Medieval Dutch form of Quirinus.
Quisqueya f Spanish (Caribbean)
From a Taíno name for the Caribbean island of Hispaniola, which is made up of Haiti and the Dominican Republic. It has been applied poetically to the Dominican Republic since the Restoration War in the 1860s, and appears in its national anthem (sometimes known as 'Valiant Quisqueyans')... [more]
Quiyauh m Nahuatl
Means "it has rained", derived from Nahuatl quiyahuitl "rain, rainstorm", the nineteenth day sign of the tonalpohualli.
Qulamhüseyn m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Gholamhossein.
Qulla Nayra f Aymara
From the Aymara qulla meaning "medicine, remedy" and nayra meaning "eyes".
Qullqi Nayra f Aymara
Means "silver eyes" in Aymara.
Qulpynai f Kazakh
Variant of Kulpynai.
Qulyndreia f African American (Rare)
Most likely an invented name. This name is borne by Qulyndreia Wallis, the mother of actress Quvenzhané Wallis.
Qunduzoy f Uzbek
Derived from qunduz meaning "otter" and oy meaning "moon".
Qunying f & m Chinese
From Chinese 群 (qún) meaning "group, crowd, flock" combined with 英 (yīng) meaning "flower, petal, brave, hero". Other character combinations can form this name as well.
Qunyquekya f African American (Rare)
Most likely an invented name. This name is borne by Qunyquekya Wallis, the older sister of actress Quvenzhané Wallis.
Quoyle m Literature
The name of the main character in E. Annie Proulx‘s The Shipping News (1993). The name apparently is based on the English word coil.
Quraisy m Indonesian, Muslim
Possibly derived from the Quraysh tribe. The Quraysh were a powerful merchant tribe that controlled Mecca and its Ka'aba and that according to tradition descended from Ishmael... [more]
Quralay f Uzbek
Means "fawn" in Uzbek.
Qurbonoy f Uzbek
Derived from qurbon meaning "religious offering, oblation" and oy meaning "moon".
Quriquyllur f Quechua
Derived from Quechua quri "gold" and quyllur "star".
Qurrat al-ʿAyn f Arabic, Iranian (?)
Means "solace/consolation to the eyes" in Arabic. This was the title of Fatimah Baraghani, a 19th-century Persian poet, theologian and reformer (compare Táhirih).
Qutaybah m Arabic, Urdu
Means ‘The Bag’ in Arabic.
Qutluay f Azerbaijani
Possibly from the Ottoman Turkish قوتلو (kutlu, qutlu) meaning "fortunate, lucky" and ay meaning "moon".
Quy f & m Vietnamese
Quy means turtle in Vietnamese... [more]
Quya f Quechua
Means "queen" in Quechua.
Quyakusi f Quechua
Means "happy queen" in Quechua, from quya "queen" and kusi "happy, joyful".
Quyết m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 決 (quyết) meaning "decide, determine".
Quyllur m & f Quechua
Means "star" in Quechua.
Quyllurit’i f Quechua
Derived from Quechua quyllur meaning "star" and rit'i meaning "snow". This is a famous Peruvian religious festival.
Quynh f & m Vietnamese (Anglicized, Expatriate)
Variant of Quỳnh used outside of Vietnam.
Quynn f English (Modern)
Feminine variant of Quinn.
Quyoshoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek quyosh meaning "sun, sunlight" and oy meaning "moon".
Qyburn m Literature
Created by author George R. R. Martin for a character in his series "A Song of Ice and Fire" and the television adaptation "Game of Thrones". In the series, Qyburn is a former maester who was expelled from the Citadel for unethical experiments and necromancy.
Rỉ f & m Vietnamese (Rare)
Means "to drip" or "to whisper" in Vietnamese.
Raabiya f Arabic
Variant of Rabi'a or Raabi'a.
Raadhi f Odia
Means "achievement; success" in Odia.
Raafaali m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Râvfaile.
Raafael m Finnish
Finnish form of Raphael.
Raage m Somali
Means "he who delayed at birth" in Somali.
Raajaa m Odia
Odia form of Raja 2.
Raama m Japanese
From Japanese 羅 (ra) meaning "gauze, thin silk" combined with 天 (ama) meaning "heavens, sky". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Raamah m Biblical
Means "exalted" or "thunder". In the Bible, this is a son of Cush.
Raamiah m Biblical
Means "thunder of Yahweh" in Hebrew. This is a minor character in the Bible, a prince who returns from exile in the book of Nehemiah.
Raamla f African American
In the case of American television writer Raamla Mohamed she was named after a little girl who had the same name her mom later added an extra a so her name could be pronounced correctly
Raanu m & f Indian
Raanu was the Agori leader of the Fire Tribe.
Raas m Dutch (Rare)
Modern Dutch form of Raes.
Raati f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Marathi, Nepali, Gujarati, Bengali, Assamese, Punjabi, Indian (Sikh)
Means "liberal; bestowing" in many Indian languages.
Raav f Russian
Russian form of Rahab.
Raavi f Indian, Hindi, Hinduism, Kannada, Telugu
Name: Raavi / Raawi रावी... [more]
Raaxo f Somali
Means "enjoyment, comfort" in Somali.
Raay m Nepali
MEANING - King, royal... [more]
Raba f German (Archaic)
Possibly a feminine version of Rabe.
Rabadan m Dargin
Dargin form of Ramadan. Another source suggests that it is derived from Arabic رب (rabb) meaning "master, lord, king" and Persian دانا (dana) meaning "wise, learned".
Rabadash m Literature
The ambitious crown prince of Calormen in 'The Horse and His Boy' by C.S. Lewis.
Rabah m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Means "profitable, gainful, winner" in Arabic, from the root ربح (rabiha) meaning "to gain, to win, to profit".
Rabán m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Raban.
Rabani f Odia
Means "divine" in Odia.
Rábano m Galician, Portuguese
Galician and Portuguese form of Raban via it's Latinized form Rabanus.
Rabano m Italian, Spanish, Sardinian, Esperanto
Italian, Spanish, Sardinian, and Esperanto form of Raban via it's Latinized form Rabanus.
Rabastan m Literature
Invented variant of Rastaban. This is the name of Rabastan Lestrange, a character in the "Harry Potter" series written by J.K. Rowling.
Rabay f Seediq
Truku dialect name.
Rabbah m Hebrew
Means "great" or "Rabbi" in Hebrew.
Rabbe m Finland Swedish, Swedish (Rare)
Either a German diminutive of Raban or a Swedish diminutive of Rafael.... [more]
Rabbin m Scots (Archaic)
Scots form of Robin.
Rabbiya f Pakistani (Rare)
Variant transcription of Rabi'a.
Rabe m East Frisian (Archaic)
A short form of Radbod. It coincides in spelling and pronunciation with modern German word Rabe "raven".
Rabea f German
Meaning unknown. This name became popular in Germany in the early 1970s, due to Rabea Hartmann (born in 1947), a German TV personality.
Rabea m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ربيع (see Rabi 1).
Rabeah f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Rabi'a.
Rabeb f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic رباب (see Rubab) chiefly used in North Africa.
Rabêcca f Guernésiais
Guernésiais form of Rebecca.
Rabege f Medieval English
Meaning uncertain. This was used in the south of England in the latter half of the 16th century.
Rabekkah f English (Rare)
A spelling of Rebecca which seems to have been used in the 1600s and 1700s, and was apparently revived in the late 1990s.
Rabelani m & f Venda
Means "to pray" in Tshivenda.
Rabert m Scots
Scots form of Robert.
Rabgais m Ladakhi
Ladakhi form of Rabgay.
Rabgay m & f Tibetan
From Tibetan རབ་རྒྱས (rab-rgyas) meaning "very broad, very wide", derived from རབ (rab) meaning "very, extremely" and རྒྱས (rgyas) meaning "extensive, broad, wide".
Rabgye m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan རབ་རྒྱས (see Rabgay).
Rabi f Shipibo-Conibo
Means "praise" in Shipibo.
Rabiab f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ระเบียบ (see Rabiap).
Rabiah f English (Rare), Pakistani (Rare)
Variant transcription of Rabi'a which has also seen some usage in the English-speaking world.
Rabiap f Thai
Means "rule, order" in Thai.
Rabiat f Chechen, Ingush
Chechen and Ingush form of Rabi'a.
Rabicano m Carolingian Cycle, Literature
Means "white tail", derived from Spanish rabo "tail" and Spanish cano "white". The original word described a horse with white hairs in its tail, though nowadays rabicano refers to a certain coat color for horses, specifically in roans... [more]
Rabie m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ربيع (see Rabi 1).
Räbiğä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Raabi'a.
Rabih m Arabic
Means "spring (the season)" in Arabic.
Rabihah f Arabic
Means "winner" in Arabic.
Rabii m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic ربيع (see Rabi 1) chiefly used in Northern Africa.
Rabija f Bosnian (Rare)
Bosnian form of Rabi'a.
Rabije f Albanian
Albanian form of Rabia.
Rabinder m & f Indian (Sikh)
Variant of Ravindra used by Sikhs.
Rabindranath m Bengali
Bengali form of Ravindranath. A notable bearer was Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941).
Rabiyat f Dagestani, Avar, Lezgin, Lak
Dagestani form of Rabi'a.
Rabiye f Turkish
Turkish form of Rabia.
Rabmag m Biblical
Rabmag is the name of two figures in the Bible.
Rabren m Serbian
Likely to come from "храбар" ("hrabrar"), which means "brave".
Rabten m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan རབ་བརྟན (rab-brtan) meaning "steady, steadfast".
Rabumi f Japanese
(rabu) means love and (mi) means beauty or beautiful
Rabuno f Japanese
From Japanese 愛 (rabu) meaning "love, affection" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle. Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Rabyga f Turkmen
Turkmen form of Raabi'a.
Raca f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Malayalam form of Rebecca, borrowed from Portuguese Rebeca. Used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Rəcəb m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Rajab.
Racana f Telugu
Means "arranging, composing", "stringing flowers" or "weaving wreathes" in Telugu.
Race m English (American, Rare)
Either a transferred use of the surname Race or simply from the word race.
Racer m English (Rare)
Late Old English, from Old Norse rás ‘current.’ It was originally a northern English word with the sense ‘rapid forward movement,’ which gave rise to the senses ‘contest of speed’ (early 16th century) and ‘channel, path’ (i.e., the space traversed)... [more]
Racey f English
Created name combining Ray with the acey suffix, found in names such as Casey, Macy, and Tracy.
Rach f English
Diminutive of Rachel.
Racha m Lao
Lao form of Raja 2.
Racha f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic رشا (see Rasha).
Rachaell f English
Variant spelling of Rachel.
Rachal f English
Variant of Rachel.
Rachamim m Hebrew
Means "mercy, compassionate" in Hebrew.
Rachan m Thai
Means "monarch, lord, master" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit राजन् (rajan).
Rachana f & m Khmer
Means "fine arts" in Khmer.
Rachanee f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ratchani.
Rachany f Khmer
Means "night" in Khmer.
Râché f Jèrriais, Guernésiais
Jèrriais and Guernésiais form of Rachel.
Raché f Guernésiais
Guernésiais form of Rachel.
Rached m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi transcription of Rashid (chiefly Tunisian).
Ráchel f Czech, Slovak, Hungarian
Czech, Slovak and Hungarian form of Rachel.
Rachela f Italian (Rare), Polish (Rare), Dutch (Rare), Afrikaans (Rare)
Italian variant of Rachele, Polish form of Rachel as well as a Latinate form of Rachel.
Rachelė f Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Rachel.
Racheltjie f Afrikaans
Diminutive of Rachel.
Rachide m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi variant of Rashid.
Rachie f English
Diminutive of Rachel.
Rachil f Greek, Judeo-Greek
Modern Greek form of Rachel via Biblical Greek Rhachel.
Rachit m Indian
Creation or to create. Language of origin: Hindi. Place of origin: India
Rachma f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Rahma.
Rachmad m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Rahmat.
Rachmah f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Rahma.
Rachman m Indonesian
Indonesian form of Rahman.
Rachmatullah m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Rahmatullah.
Rachmatulloh m Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Rahmatullah.
Rachmiel m Yiddish
Name used by Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazic Jews in Europe
Rachnild f Dutch
Dutch form of Old Norse Ragnhild. ... [more]
Rachouane m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant of Arabic رشوان (Rashwan) influenced by French orthography (chiefly Tunisian).
Racimiar m Polish
Variant of Racimir.
Racimir m Polish
Polish form of Ratimir.
Racława f Polish (Archaic)
Feminine form of Racław.
Racman m Filipino, Maranao, Maguindanao
Maranao and Maguindanao form of Rahman.
Ráďa m Czech
Diminutive of Radek and Radim.
Rada f Thai
Means "delight, joy" in Thai.
Rada f Romanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Radu.
Radagaisus m Gothic
Radagaisus (died 23 August 406) was a Gothic king who led an invasion of Roman Italy in late 405 and the first half of 406. A committed Pagan, Radagaisus evidently planned to sacrifice the Senators of the Christian Roman Empire to the gods and to burn Rome to the ground... [more]
Radagast m Literature
One of the wizards in the books by J.R.R. Tolkien. His name may mean "tender of beasts" in Adûnaic.
Radah m & f Ancient Hebrew
to rule, have dominion, dominate, tread down... [more]
Radamant m Bosnian, Croatian, Romanian
Bosnian, Croatian and Romanian form of Rhadamanthos.
Radamantas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Rhadamanthos.
Radamanto m Italian, Portuguese
Italian and Portuguese form of Rhadamanthos.
Radamel m Spanish (Latin American, Rare)
Best known for being the name of Colombian soccer striker Radamel Falcao (b. 1986). The meaning of the name is unknown. It may come from the surname Radamel or even be a hispanicized form of Radomil (via Slavic immigrants).
Radamés m Spanish (Rare)
Spanish form of Radames.
Radames m Theatre
Radamès is a character, the captain of the guard, in the opera 'Aida' (1871). The setting of the opera is ancient Egypt, and the creators of the play likely invented the name to sound vaguely Egyptian by integrating Ra into the name.
Radan m Czech
Contracted form of Radovan.
Radaši m Vlach
Derived from Vlach raditi meaning "to work".
Radašin m Vlach
Variant of Radaši.
Radbald m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German bald "bold, brave."
Radbert m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German beraht "bright."
Radbodo m History (Ecclesiastical)
Italian and Spanish form of Radbod.
Radbrand m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old Norse brand "sword."
Radburg f Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Old High German rât "counsel." The second element is derived from Gothic bairgan (bergan in Old High German) "to keep, to save, to preserve", or from Old High German burg "fortress."
Radcliffe m English (Rare), Jamaican Patois
From a surname, a variant of Radcliff.
Raddai m Biblical, Hebrew
Possibly from Hebrew רָדָה (radah) meaning "to beat down" or "to spread out". This name belonged to the fifth son of Jesse (according to 2 Chronicles 2:14).
Raddix m & f English (American, Modern, Rare), Obscure (Modern)
Used by American actress Cameron Diaz for her daughter born 2019. It might be inspired by Latin radix meaning "root", which is the source of the English word radical, or the similar name Maddox.... [more]
Raddy m Russian (Rare)
Short for Radojko, Radomir or Radislav
Radegast m Slavic Mythology
From Slavic radǔ (content, glad), or rad (kind, willing, happy), and gostŭ (host). Old god of Slavic mythology. He is considered to be a deity of hospitality, or host or leader of an assembly or council... [more]
Radegonda f Italian, Sardinian
Italian and Sardinian form of Radegund.
Radegund f Germanic, History
Variant of Radgund. Radegund lived in the 6th century AD and was a daughter of Berthar/Bertachar, one of the three kings of Thuringia. She later became the second wife of Chlothar I, a Frankish king from the Merovingian dynasty.
Radel m Russian
From the Slavic name element rad meaning "willing"
Radenka f Vlach, Slovene
Feminine form of Radenko.
Radenko m Serbian, Croatian
An elaborate form of Rade.
Radeya f Pakistani
Always happy
Radford m English
Transferred use of the surname Radford.
Radfrid m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German fridu "peace."
Rådgärd f Swedish (Rare)
Modern Swedish form of Radhgärdh.
Radgard f Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Old High German rât "counsel." The second element is derived from gardan "to hedge in, to enclose, to fence in" or from Gothic gards "house, garden, (court)yard."
Radgast m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Gothic gasts (gast in Old High German) "guest, stranger."
Radger m Germanic
The first element of this Germanic name is derived from Old High German rât "counsel." The second element is derived from Gothic gairu (gêr in Old High German) "spear", or from garva (garo in Old High German, and gearu in Anglo-Saxon) "ready, prepared."
Radgild f Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Gothic gild "sacrifice."
Radgis m Germanic
The first element of this Germanic name comes from Old High German rât "counsel." The meaning and origin of the second element is rather uncertain: we know that it comes from gis (the original form was possibly gîs), but we don't exactly know where gis itself comes from... [more]
Radgost m Slavic Mythology
From Slavic radǔ (content, glad), or rad (kind, willing, happy), and gostŭ (host). Old god of Slavic mythology. He is considered to be a deity of hospitality, or host or leader of an assembly or council... [more]
Rådgrid f Norwegian (Hypothetical)
Norwegian form of Ráðgríðr, only used in translations of Old Norse texts.
Radgrim m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old Norse grîma "mask."
Radgund f Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old High German gund "war."
Radhaid f Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with haidu "figure, person" (see Adelaide).
Radhakrishna m Indian, Telugu, Malayalam
Combination of Radha and Krishna. In Hinduism, this term refers to the combination of feminine and masculine aspects of God.
Radhakrishnan m Indian
Krishna, lord of Hindus, and Radha, his staunch devotee, finally became part of him... [more]
Radhakrishnan m Malayalam, Tamil
Malayalam and Tamil variant of Radhakrishna.
Radhard m Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Gothic hardus (hart in Old High German) "brave, hardy."
Radheshyam m Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Odia
Combination of Radha and Shyama.
Radhgärdh f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Ráðgerðr.
Radhi m Arabic, Malay
Means "satisfied, pleased" in Arabic.
Radhia f Arabic
Feminine form of Radhi.
Radhild f Germanic
Derived from Old High German rât "counsel" combined with Old Norse hildr "battle."
Radhouane m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic رضوان (see Ridwan) chiefly used in North Africa.
Radhouène m Arabic (Maghrebi, Rare)
Maghrebi transcription of Ridwan (chiefly Tunisian).
Radhuan m Malay
Malay variant of Ridwan.
Radi m Arabic, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic راضي (see Radhi), as well as the Indonesian form.
Radia f Russian (Archaic)
Elaboration of Rada.
Radiance f & m English
From Latin radiare + -ance. From the English word, defined as "the light or heat as emitted or reflected by something" or "great happiness", occasionally used as a given name.
Radica f Slovene
Diminutive of Rada, used as a given name in its own right.
Radif m Persian
Means "order" in Persian.
Radigund f Literature
Variant of Radegund used by Edmund Spenser for a queen of the Amazons in his poem 'The Faerie Queene' (1590).
Radija m & f Vlach
Derived from rad and raditi, which respectively mean "work" and "to work" in Vlach and Macedonian.
Radik m Tatar, Bashkir
Derived from Persian راضی‎ (râzi) meaning "pleased, satisfied, happy" (through an Arabic borrowing).
Radimir m Bulgarian, Serbian, Russian (Rare)
Also spelled as Radomir, the name Radimir is of Slavic origin and has meanings like "famous for peace," "happy," or "radiating joy.". It's a combination of "radi," meaning radiance or fame, and "mir," meaning peace or world... [more]
Radin m Persian (Rare)
Persian given name meaning ''chivalrous man''.
Rading m Filipino
Diminutive of Conrado.