Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the order is random.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Adamastos m Greek Mythology
Means "untamed" in Greek. This was an epithet of Hades. In Greek legend Adamastus of Ithaca was the father of Achaemenides, Odysseus' companion.
Rogeros m Greek (Cypriot)
Greek form of Roger.
Rizkiah f Indonesian
Strictly feminine variant of Rizki.
Seb m Ancient Egyptian
Variant of Geb, deriving from a historically incorrect translation.
Airisa f Latvian (Rare)
Adaption and phonetic approximation to English Iris.
Nindia f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Anindya.
Sus m & f Dutch, Flemish, West Frisian (Rare)
As a masculine name, this name is a Dutch and Flemish short form of Franciscus. Also compare Cis, which is a similar short form (mostly when it comes to pronunciation) of Franciscus.... [more]
Turai f Hausa
Name given to a girl born on a Tuesday.
Úlfviðr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse úlfr "wolf" combined with Old Norse viðr "tree".
Ratcliff m English (Rare)
Variant of Radcliff. A known bearer is the American football player Ratcliff Thomas (1974-).
Sawssen f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi transcription of Sawsan (chiefly Tunisian).
Darmaji m Indonesian
Combination of Darma and Aji.
Feona f Russian (Archaic)
Russian form of Theona.
Szczepón m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Szczepan.
Hüda f Turkish
Turkish form of Huda.
Sulho m Finnish
From the Finnish word sulho, meaning "bridegroom".
Grégori m Gascon
Gascon form of Gregory.
Doriya f Hebrew (Rare)
Combination of the names Dori (or Dor), means "(my) generation" with the letters יה (which are part of the name of God).
Kejuan m African American
A combination of the phonetic element ke with Juan. It can also be spelt as KeJuan.
Wigman m Germanic
Derived from Old High German wîg "warrior" combined with man "man."
Liubigild m Germanic
Derived from Old High German liub "dear, beloved" combined with Gothic gild "sacrifice."
Nerlande f Haitian Creole
Haitian word for "Netherlands".
Mehyeddine m Arabic
Variant transcription of Mehieddine.
Emanet f Turkish
Means "entrustment" via Arabic أمانات amanat. In the Quran (33:72) the word is used to describe God entrusting humans with free will. See also Amanat and Amanet.
Atanasius m Dutch (Rare), Finnish (Rare), German (Rare)
Dutch, Finnish and German variant of Athanasius.
Marykate f English (Rare)
Combination of Mary and Kate.
Torøy f Norwegian (Rare)
Norwegian younger form of Þórey.
Mehparə f Azerbaijani
Means "piece of the moon", derived from Persian ماه (mah) meaning "moon" and پاره (pareh) meaning "piece, portion, part".
Ntxawm f Hmong
Means "youngest daughter" in Hmong.
Charnelle f English (Rare)
Presumably, an invented name similar to names like Charnette, Charmaine and Chanelle... [more]
Möngke m Medieval Mongolian
Means "everlasting, eternal" in Mongolian.... [more]
Xiaojun m & f Chinese
From Chinese 小 (xiǎo) meaning "small", 晓 (xiǎo) meaning "dawn, daybreak", or 骁 (xiāo) meaning "brave, valiant" combined with 军 or 軍 (jūn) meaning "army", 君 (jūn) meaning "king, ruler", or 骏 (jùn) "good horse, fast"... [more]
Ihbarhasvad m Mongolian
Possibly derives from Mongolian их (ikh) meaning "great, large, many" and бархасбадь (barkhasbadi) meaning "Jupiter (the planet)".
Cuauhtopilli m Nahuatl
Means "wooden staff" or "eagle staff" in Nahuatl, from cuahuitl "tree, wood" or cuauhtli "eagle" and topilli "rod, sceptre, staff of office".
Alküoné f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Alcyone.
Kouiteria f Greek
Greek form of Quiteria.
Aitang f Chinese
From the Chinese 爱 (ài) meaning "love" and 棠 (táng) meaning "wild plums".
Braga f Icelandic
Feminine form of Bragi.
Githika f Sinhalese, Indian
Southern Indian variant of Gitika, which means "a little song" from Sanskrit गीता (gītā) "song" (see Gita 1) and the diminutive suffix क (ka) "little".
Rastislava f Slovene
Feminine form of Rastislav.
Jódís f Old Norse, Icelandic
Combination of Old Norse jór "horse" and dís "goddess".
Airlie f English (Australian, Modern)
Transferred use of the surname Airlie.
Honovi f Hopi
Means "strong deer" in Hopi.
Mihaly m Banat Swabian
Banatswabian borrowing of Mihály.
Ximphephani f Tsonga
Means "the saved" in Tsonga.
Rafaqat m Urdu
Means "friendship, companionship" in Urdu, ultimately from Arabic رفاقة (rafaqah).
Sfenel m Russian (Rare)
Russian form of Sthenelus.
Erchimen m Yakut
Variant of Erchim.
Cratilo m Italian
Italian form of Cratylus.
Marlenka f Slovene
Diminutive of Marlena, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Glói m Old Norse, Norse Mythology, Icelandic
Old Norse male form of Glóa or an Icelandic form of Glóði. In Norse mythology this is the name of a dwarf.
Latrix f African American (Modern, Rare)
Coined with the popular prefix la- and the suffix -trix from Beatrix. Possibly inspired by Leatrix.
Bec f Irish Mythology (?)
Allegedly an older form of Irish beag "small".... [more]
Gangulfr m Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements gangr "walking, motion, path" and ulfr "wolf".
Jildau f West Frisian (Modern)
This Frisian name can be a variant spelling of Geldau, or a variant form of Jeldau.
Protas m Ancient Greek, Russian
Short form of Greek compound names that contain the Greek element πρωτος (protos) meaning "first", such as Protagoras and Protogenes... [more]
Vili f Greek
Diminutive of Vasiliki and Vilelmini.
Múhameð m History
Icelandic form of Muhammad, used to refer to the Islamic prophet.
Jatupol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Chatuphon.
Sightrygg m Old Danish, Old Swedish
Old Danish and Old Swedish form of Sigtryggr.
Placite f Norman
Norman feminine form of Placidus.
Nogai m Mongolian
Probably derived from Mongolian нохой (nokhoi) meaning "dog".
Ofa f Polynesian
Short form of Alofa and Ofania.
Bayrambaxt f Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek bayram meaning "holiday" and baxt meaning "happiness".
Büüvei m & f Mongolian
Means "lullaby" in Mongolian.
Karpo m & f Tibetan
Means "white, pure" in Tibetan.
Vaaʹssel m Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Vasili.
Domino f Popular Culture, English (Rare)
Short form of Dominique. It was used by author Ian Fleming in his James Bond novel 'Thunderball' (1961), where the nickname belongs to Bond's Italian love interest Dominetta "Domino" Vitali (renamed Dominique "Domino" and simply Domino in the 1965 and 1983 film adaptations, respectively)... [more]
Ysé f Theatre, French (Rare)
Used by Paul Claudel for a character in his play 'Partage de midi' (1906). Perhaps it is derivative of Yseult.
Walamar m Germanic
Derived from Old High German walah "wanderer, traveller, foreigner" combined with Old High German mâri "famous."
Sędziwuj m Polish
Derived from Polish sądzić "to judge" and wuj "uncle".
Intef m Ancient Egyptian
From Egyptian jnj-jt.f meaning "(he) whom his father brought", derived from jnj "to bring", jt "father", and .f "his". This name was borne by several Egyptian pharaohs.
Djamileh f Persian, Theatre
Possibly a Persian form of Jamila.
Myrvete f Albanian
Albanian form of Mürvet.
Vali m Uzbek, Azerbaijani
Uzbek form of Wali.
Joes m Dutch, German
Short form of both Josef and Johannes.
Aýsoltan f Turkmen
Turkmen feminine form of Aisultan
Yalian f & m Chinese
Combination of Ya, Li 1 and An 1.
Smaro f Greek
Diminutive of Smaragda.
Maruani m & f Polynesian
Polynesian name, meaning "calm wind".
Amairani f Spanish (Mexican, Modern), Spanish (Latin American, Modern)
Possibly an invented name based on the sounds found in names such as Amaya, Mayra and Leilani... [more]
Ricou m Provençal
Diminutive of Enri 2.
Pàul m Piedmontese
Piedmontese form of Paul.
Euge m English
Short form of Eugene.
Nadimoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek nadim meaning "companion" and oy meaning "moon".
Mobley m & f Obscure
Transferred use of the surname Mobley.
Jakubek m Polish
Diminutive of Jakub.
Cynane f Ancient Greek (Latinized)
A famous bearer is Cynane, half-sister to Alexander the Great.
Bergny f Norwegian (Rare)
Norwegian variant of Borgny.
Seong-Han m Korean
From Sino-Korean 成 (seong) meaning "completed, finished, succeeded", 星 (seong) meaning "star, planet", 城 (seong) meaning "castle, city, town" or 聲 (seong) meaning "sound, voice, tone" combined with 漢 (han) meaning "Han people, man" or 翰 (han) meaning "writing, painting"... [more]
Eshah f Malay, Urdu
Malay and Urdu form of Aisha.
Aresenije m Serbian
Serbian form of Arsenius.
Sayuti m Indonesian, Malay
From the name of 15th-century Islamic scholar, jurist and mystic Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, whose name was derived from the city of Asyut in Egypt.
Dục m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 毓 (dục) meaning "to give birth to, to bring up" or 昱 (dục) meaning "sunlight, to shine".
Faunia f English (American, Rare)
Elaborated variant of Fauna.
Sniažana f Belarusian (Rare)
Variant transcription of Sniazhana.
Aleyshka f Spanish (Latin American)
Likely an elaboration of Aleysha.
Aekaluck m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai เอกลักษณ์ (see Ekkalak).
Jávorka f Hungarian (Modern)
Derived from Hungarian jávor "maple".
Tojiahmad m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek toj meaning "crown" and the given name Ahmad.
Shoqyr m Kazakh (Rare)
Derived from the Kazakh noun шоқыр (shoqyr) meaning "starry sturgeon" (Acipenser stellatus).... [more]
Giordi m Sardinian (Archaic)
Sardinian form of George.
Taiguo m & f Chinese
Combination of the names Tai and Guo.
Holisoa f Malagasy
Combination of Holy and the adjective soa "good, beautiful, excellent".
Desirella f French (African, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Desirée with the suffix -ella.
Sutin m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai สุทิน (see Suthin).
Alfryd m Silesian
Silesian form of Alfred.
Yaidelin f Spanish (Latin American, Rare), Spanish (Caribbean, Rare)
Latin American name of uncertain meaning, used particularly in Cuba and Venezuela.
Gervese m Medieval French
Old French form of Gervais, recorded 18 times in the 1292 census of Paris.
Gaisalaiks m Gothic
Original Gothic form of Giselaic.
Alaiz m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Aloysius.
Xiuxin f Chinese
From the Chinese 秀 (xiù) meaning "beautiful, elegant, flowering, luxuriant, refined, graceful" and 心 (xīn) meaning "heart, mind, soul".
Edeyrn m History (Ecclesiastical)
Saint Edeyrn (c. 6th century) was a pre-congregational saint of Wales, related to Vortigern and the royal house of Powys and the brother of Saint Aerdeyrn and Elldeyrn. Edeyrn is the patron saint of Lannédern in France and Llanedeyrn in Wales, where he founded a monastery of over 300 people.
Liyu f Chinese, Chinese Mythology, Far Eastern Mythology
From the characters 丽 (lì, meaning “beautiful”) and 娱 (yú, meaning “amusement” or “to make happy”). In Chinese mythology Liyu was a secondary wife to the Yellow Emperor (Xuanyuan) who was said to have invented cooking... [more]
Maquia f Popular Culture
The name of the main character, a young, orphaned Iorph girl, in the 2018 Japanese animated high fantasy drama film 'Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms'.
Dessi f Indonesian
Variant of Desi.
Dod m Scots
Scots diminutive of George.
Fekau m Tongan
Means "order, message" in Tongan.
Þjóðvé f Old Norse
Old West Norse feminine name derived from þjóð meaning "folk, people" and the name element -ví which means "holy" or "priest".
Xiyue f Chinese
From the Chinese 希 (xī) meaning "hope, expect, rare" or 晰 (xī) meaning "clear, evident, clearly" and 悦 (yuè) meaning "pleased, contented" or 月 (yuè) meaning "moon".
Mayali f Hebrew (Modern)
Combination of the names Maya 3 and Li 2 meaning "my water".
Santiaga f Spanish
Feminine form of Santiago.
Maruschka f Dutch
Dutch form of Marushka. A known bearer of this name is the Dutch actress Maruschka Detmers (b. 1962).
Rusimir m Croatian, Serbian
The first element of this name is probably derived from the Serbo-Croatian noun Rus meaning "Russian". The Russians themselves derived their name from (Old) Russian rusij or rusiy, which refers to a light hair colour (often blonde; some sources also say light-brown) and could be understood to mean "fair-haired" or "fair-headed"... [more]
Indiga f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Perhaps intended as a feminine variant of Indigo.
Saengchansuk f Lao
Means "intoxicating moonlight" in Lao.
Buronya m & f Akan
Means "Christmas" in Akan. This may be given to children born around this time of year.
Xainte f French (Archaic), French (Quebec, Rare, Archaic)
Variant of Sainte. A notable bearer was Xainte Dupont (1595-1680), an early settler of New France, the wife of settler Zacharie Cloutier (1590-1677), and an ancestress to the Cloutier family of Quebec.
Akvelīna f Latvian
Possibly a Latvian form of Aquilina (cf. Akvilina, Akilina). This is borne by Latvian actress Akvelīna Līvmane (1951-).
Ekkapol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Ekkaphon.
Wilbraham m English (British, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Wilbraham.
Radityo m Javanese
Variant of Raditya.
Kerl m Low German
A variation of Karl from Common-Germanic Kerlaz meaning "freeman."
Onatah f New World Mythology
In Iroquois mythology, Onatah was one of the Deohako (the Life Supporters, or Three Sisters.) Onatah represented the spirit of the corn, while her two sisters represented beans and squash. In one common Iroquois legend, Onatah was stolen by Tawiscara and hidden underground, causing a great famine until she was found and freed... [more]
Jinpachi m Japanese
From Japanese 仁 (jin) meaning "benevolent, compassionate" and 八 (pachi) meaning "eight". Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Demoptolemus m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Demoptolemos. In Greek mythology, this is the name of one of the suitors of Penelope.
Fitria f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Fitri.
Wasima f Arabic
Feminine form of Wasim.
Brynhilda f Medieval Scandinavian, Swedish (Archaic)
Medieval Norwegian and Swedish variant of Brynhildr.
Rafaèl m Occitan
Occitan form of Rafael.
Sal m Jewish
Variant of Sol 2.
Maraliese f Afrikaans (Rare)
Combination of Mara 1 and Liese.
Teobalds m Latvian
Latvian from of Theobald.
Abdonas m Lithuanian (Rare)
Lithuanian form of Abdon.
Björnólfur m Icelandic
Icelandic younger form of Björnúlfr.
Edona f Albanian
Feminine form of Edon.
Egoitz m Basque
From Basque egoitza meaning "residence".
Iriseo m Spanish, Italian, Portuguese
masculine form of Iris Means "rainbow" in Greek.
Erdni m Kalmyk
Means "jewel, jewels" in Kalmyk.
Caprasio m Italian, Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Caprasius.
Oleksa m & f Ukrainian, Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian variant of Oleksiy, more common in the past (but still in use today). It is usually masculine, but occasionally in the modern day, it is a feminine name.
Contuinda f Gaulish
While the second element is derived from Gaulish uindos "white", the first element is derived from Gaulish conto- which is of debated meaning. The meaning "(one) hundred" has been suggested.
Sakuna f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (saku) meaning "blossom" or 朔 (saku) meaning "first day of lunar month" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens", 生 (na) meaning "live", 命 (na) meaning "life, fate, destiny" or 奈 (na) meaning "apple tree"... [more]
Boammaruri m Tswana
Means "truth" in Setswana.
Bertet m Provençal
Diminutive of Aubert.
Mayden f & m English (American, Rare), Filipino (Rare)
Combination of May or Mason and the -den suffix found in names such as Hayden... [more]
Bador m Filipino
Short form of Salvador.
Ártemas m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Artemas.
Ernye m Medieval Hungarian
Of debated origin and meaning; theories include an Old Hungarian form of Iréneusz via the form Irne.
Cina f Italian, Medieval Italian
Feminine form of of Cino.
Żanna f Medieval Polish, Polish
Medieval Polish diminutive of Żużanna and Polish form of Jeanne.
Zəngin m Azerbaijani
Means "rich" in Azerbaijani.
Lezah f English
Not very common, only given to sixteen people in the U.S. from 1880 to 2022 (according to SSA), Lezah is the name "Hazel" backwards. It is also a variant of Lisa.
Lichen f & m Chinese (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the names Li 1 and Chen 1.
Siclebald m Old High German, Medieval, Medieval French
An elongation of Old High German sigu "victory" + Old High German bald "bold".
Widhere m Anglo-Saxon
Derived from the Old English elements wīd "wide" (from wīdaz) and here "army". Cognate to Old Norse Víðarr.
Róża f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Rosa 1.
Stellah f English
Variant of Stella 1.
Baraq m Biblical Hebrew
Ancient Hebrew form of Barak 1.
Odulf m Germanic, Dutch, German
Variant form of Audulf.
Chengxu m Chinese
From the Chinese 程 (chéng) meaning "journey" and 旭 (xù) meaning "rising sun; brilliance; radiant".
Gunpei m Japanese (Rare)
From 軍 (gun) meaning "army, troops, forces, military" and 平 (hei) meaning "peace, flat, even, level". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Osahiro m Japanese
From Japanese 修 (osa) meaning "discipline, study" combined with 寛 (hiro) meaning "tolerant, generous", 弘 (hiro) meaning "expand", 博 (hiro) meaning "wide, broad, rich, abundant, plentiful" combined with 洋 (hiro) meaning "ocean"... [more]
Bryvyth f Medieval Cornish, History (Ecclesiastical)
The name of a medieval Cornish saint.
Maksina f Russian
Russian variant of Maxine.
Tianhan f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" or 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 晗 (hán) meaning "pre-dawn" or 菡 (hàn) meaning "lotus bud".
Zbawimił m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish zbawić "to save, to redeem" (also compare Polish zbawienie "salvation, redemption" and Croatian izbaviti "to save, to redeem")... [more]
Zijuan f Chinese
From the Chinese 紫 (zǐ) meaning "purple, violet" and 娟 (juān) meaning "graceful, beautiful" or 绢 (juàn) meaning "thin silk".
Oynajamol f Uzbek
Derived from oyna meaning "a pane of glass", "mirror", or "window" and jamol meaning "beauty".
Shauntal f English (Modern, Rare), Popular Culture
This name can be a variant of Chantal.... [more]
Camrin m English
Variant of Cameron.
Barkley m English
From a surname which is a variant of Barclay.
Jegede m Nigerian (Modern)
A very active person that moves around a lot
Kratylos m Ancient Greek
Derived from Greek κρατος (kratos) meaning "power".
Nurah f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic نورة (see Nura).
Aohito m Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 青 or 蒼 (ao) meaning "blue" combined with 人 (hito) meaning "person". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Clarie f French, Gascon
French and Gascon form of Claria.
Ibrokhim m Uzbek, Tajik
Alternate transcription of Ibrohim.
Arbora f Albanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Arbor.
Hlei f & m Chin
Means "bridge" in Hakha Chin.
Kunz m Medieval German, German (Archaic)
A once very popular short form of Konrad.
Liya f Eastern African, Ethiopian
Possibly an Amharic form of Leah. It is borne by Ethiopian model Liya Kebede (1978-).
Alitz f Provençal
Provençal form of Alice.
Remzşinas f Ottoman Turkish
Means "knower of signs", from Arabic رمز (ramz) meaning "symbol, emblem" and Persian شناس (shenas), the present stem of شناختن (shenakhtan) meaning "to know".
Oladigbolu f & m Yoruba
First of the most-loyal governing antonym of the native black jew. The name was bestow to the only first kin of orunmila
Ğubaidullah m Kazakh
Kazakh variant spelling of Ubaidullah.
Jalal al-Din m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic جلال الدين (see Jalal ad-Din).
Keali'ivai m Polynesian, Hawaiian
Polynesian name, meaning "chief of water", "chief of the sea", "king of the sea".
Piyaporn f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ปิยะพร (see Piyaphon).
Oku m & f Efik
Means Priest
Shuuko f Japanese
From 萩⁠ (hagi, shu, ha) “Japanese clover, bush clover”, 洲⁠ (su, shu, shima) “state, continent” or 須⁠⁠ (su, shu, subeka-raku, mochi-iru, moto-meru, mochi, motomu, matsu) ”mandatory, necessary, moment, short while” combined with 子 (ko, ne, shi) meaning "child, sign of the rat"... [more]
Trellis m Literature
The name of the teenage Elvish prince from the "Amulet" series of graphic novels written by Kazu Kibuishi, the Japanese-American animator, writer, and artist.
Aidyn m Kazakh
Variant transcription of Aydyn.
Wranws m Welsh
Welsh form of Uranus.
Leonydas m Lithuanian (Rare)
Lithuanian form of Leonidas.
Ezékiel m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Ezekiel.
Hae-ju f & m Korean
From Sino-Korean 海 "sea, ocean" and 珠 "precious stone, gem, jewel, pearl".
Jonuel m Spanish (Caribbean), Spanish (Latin American)
Combination of José or Josué with any name ending in -uel, such as Manuel and Miguel... [more]
Lynceus m Greek Mythology (Latinized), Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Λυγκεύς (Lynkeus), though technically Lygkeus is the correct spelling. The name is a more elaborate form of Lynkos (see Lyncus)... [more]
Tuone m Italian, Friulian, Croatian, South Slavic
Short form of Antonio. A notable bearer was Tuone Udaina (1823–1898), the last speaker of Dalmatian language.
Heyam f Arabic
The meaning of name Heyam is " One of the many levels or degrees of love " or " deep love", Often used by Muslims
Lauronda f African American (Rare)
Variant of Laronda (a combination of the popular prefix La with the name Ronda), perhaps influenced by Laurinda.
Màssimu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Massimo.
Kedeb f Polynesian
Means "short" in Palauan.
Huna m Anglo-Saxon
Possibly a short form of names with the element hun "bear cub, offspring". Cognate of Húni, Húnn, Huno, and Hunno... [more]
Îsimaleĸ f Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Edwardo m English
Variant of Eduardo.
Sunao m Japanese
From 質 (sunao) meaning "confirm, content, natural appearance, characteristic", 悌 (sunao) meaning "obedience, filial piety, brotherly love" or a combination of 沙 (suna) meaning sand" and 郎 (o) meaning son"... [more]
Smaragd m & f Russian (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Russian form of Smaragdos. In the Netherlands, the name is a very rare feminine name. It is derived from the Dutch noun smaragd meaning "emerald", which as you can see has the same etymology as Smaragdos.
Nelosław m Polish
Masculine form of Nelosława.
Ryklef m West Frisian
West Frisian form of Rijklof, though this can also be a different name. In that case, the first element is derived from the Germanic element rîcja "powerful, strong, mighty." This element is also closely related to Celtic rîg or rix and Gothic reiks, which all mean "king, ruler." The second element comes from laifa, which in turn is derived from Gothic laiba (leiba in Old High German and leifr in Old Norse) "remnant, remains." By that, they actually meant the person that is left behind after one's death, so laifa is best translated (depending on the context) as "heir" or "survivor."
Celtia f Galician (Modern, Rare)
From the Galician word celta ("Celt"), thus meaning "land of the Celts". This is the name that Galician writer Eduardo Pondal gives to Galicia, reclaiming it as the quintessential land of the Celts.
Lir f & m Hebrew
Popular name in Israel, or a diminutive for names like Liron , Liram , Liran and more names starting with "Lir"
Racimiar m Polish
Variant of Racimir.
Iruene f & m Guanche Mythology, Spanish (Canarian)
This is the name of a demon that manifested itself as a large black and woolly dog, mainly in Tenerife and Gran Canaria. Variant of Yurena.
Eithar m Arabic (Archaic)
"altruistic"
Ntshuxeko m & f Tsonga
Means "freedom" in Xitsonga.
Bahtişen f Turkish
Derived from Turkish baht meaning "luck, fortune" and şen meaning "merry".
Drudwas m Welsh Mythology
Unknown meaning; first element drud may mean "strong" or "bold, reckless."... [more]
Xueyao f Chinese
From the Chinese 雪 (xuě) meaning "snow" and 瑶 (yáo) meaning "precious jade".
Matewos m Amharic
Amharic form of Matthew.
Imma m Finnish
Diminutive of Immanuel, Ilmari and Ismo.
Hopokoekau f Indigenous American, Ho-Chunk
Means "glory of the morning" or "the coming dawn" in the Ho-Chunk language. From the Ho-Chunk hąp meaning 'day', ho- 'the time at which', gu 'to come arriving', the feminine affix -wį, and the definite article -ga (used for personal names).