This is a list of submitted names in which the starting sequence is a or t; and the length is 4.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aúju f AguarunaMeans "nightjar" in Awajún. In Awajún mythology, this is the name of the wife of the moon also known as
ayaimama.
Aulë m LiteratureMeans "invention" in Quenya. Aulë is the Vala who created the dwarves in 'The Silmarillion' by J.R.R. Tolkien.
Auma f Luo"someone delivered with the face down or through the caesarean process"
Aung m & f BurmeseMeans "successful, victorious" in Burmese. A notable bearer is Aung San Suu Kyi (1945-), a Burmese politician.
Auno m & f FinnishMeaning uncertain. Either a masculine or variant feminine form of
Aune or derived from a place name.
Aura f Greek MythologyDerived from Greek
αὔρα (aura) "breeze". In Greek mythology, Aura is the goddess of the morning breeze. According to Nonnus, Aura was the daughter of the Titan
Lelantos and the mother, by
Dionysus, of
Iacchus.
Auva f AstronomyAuva is the medieval name of
Delta Virginis, a star in the zodiac constellation of Virgo. ... [
more]
Avan m Hinduism, Sanskrit, Indian, Tamil, Telugu, Nepali, Sinhalese, Indian (Sikh), BengaliMeaning, "favour, preservation, protection,(= तर्पण) satisfaction , joy, pleasure, desire, speed, preserving, a preserver."
Avio m GreenlandicGreenlandic name related to
aviorpoq "sound", "ring", "twitter", "buzzing" (in the ears), "whistle". The notion that buzzing in the ears (aviutitsineq or avequllattaaneq) as a plea for food from a deceased is known thoughout most of Greenland... [
more]
Avir m HebrewPossibly a variant of Amir, meaning treetop.
Avit m Croatian, French, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian, OccitanCroatian, French, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian and Occitan form of
Avitus.
Avri f JèrriaisJèrriais form of
April.
Avri is also the Jèrriais name of the month of April.
Avry f & m American (Rare)Variant of
Avery. In 2008, 30 boys and 24 girls were given the name AVRY. Also in 2018, 17 boys and 11 girls were named AVRY.
Ávvu m SamiEither derived from Sami
ávvu meaning "joy" or a Sami form of
Auvo.
Avya f Sanskrit, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Nepali, Sinhalese, Indian (Sikh)Meaning, "to animate, to drive, to offer (to gods as hymn), to protect, favour."
Awad m ArabicMeans "reward, compensation" in Arabic, from the root عوض
(ʿawwadha) meaning "to offset, to compensate".
Awan f Judeo-Christian-Islamic LegendIn the Book of Jubilees, this was a daughter of Adam and Eve and sister of Seth, Abel, Azura and more, and the twin sister and wife of Cain.
Awan m & f UrduDenoting someone from the Awan tribe of Pakistan.
Awat f & m KurdishDerived from the words wish, desire, hope in Kurdish. It is also used by Muslims.
Awel f WelshDirectly taken from Welsh
awel "breeze; wind".
Awen f Breton, WelshDerived from Welsh and Breton
awen "muse; (poetic) inspiration; poetic gift", ulitmately from the Indo-European root
*-uel "to blow (wind)". As a given name it has been in use since the 19th century.
Axia f English (Rare), Swedish (Rare)Meaning unknown. It may be derived from Greek άξιος
(axios) meaning "worthy" or created as a feminine form of
Axel. Alternatively, in some cases it could be a variant of
Achsia, an elaboration of
Achsah.
Ayaa f JapaneseFrom Japanese 文 (
aya) meaning "sentence" combined with 亜 (
a) meaning "second, Asia". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Ayae f JapaneseFrom Japanese 絢 (aya) meaning "brilliant fabric design, kimono design", 綾 (aya) meaning "design" or 彩 (aya) meaning "colour" combined with 絵 (e) meaning "picture, painting, drawing, sketch", 恵 (e) meaning "favour, benefit", 江 (e) meaning "creek, bay" or 枝 (e) meaning "branch"... [
more]
Ayan m Urdu, Persian, Tamil, Sanskrit, Hindi, TurkishPersian and Urdu meaning is prima-facie. Hindi and Tamil usage is from 'Ayan' the name of Brahma, the Creator. Ayan' in Turkish, means "obviously" or "clearly". Ayan in Sanskrit means 'Speed'.
Ayan m KazakhDerived from Kazakh аян
(ayan), meaning "known, teachable".
Ayao f & m JapaneseFrom Japanese 彩 (
aya) meaning "colouring" or 文 (
aya) meaning "sentence" combined with 緒 (
o) meaning "cord" or 桜 (
o) meaning "cherry blossom" (both feminine) or 夫 (
o) meaning "husband, man, manly" (masculine)... [
more]
Ayat f ArabicMeans "signs" in Arabic, referring to signs of the divine.
Ayen f DinkaRelated with a specific kind of cow in Dinka language.
Ayma f ChineseAyma, meaning 'horse lover', or 'lover of horses".
Aymn m Arabic (Egyptian)Means “right, blessed, fortunate” in Arabic. This name is used more often in Egypt.
Ayon f UzbekMeans "clear, apparent" in Uzbek.
Aysa f TurkishAysa is a Turkish-Persian name for girls that means “moonlike”, “beautiful”, “radiant”.
Ayuk m & f Jagham, KenyangMeans "they have heard" in Jagham and Kenyang, from the pronoun and root
á meaning "they" and
yúk meaning "to hear".
Ayün f TurkishModern Turkish name taking the common name element
ay, meaning "moon" and the element
ün, meaning "fame".
Ayuo m Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 鮎 (
ayu) meaning "ayu, sweetfish, catfish" or 歩 (
ayu) meaning "walk, step" combined with 生 (
o) meaning "live". Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Ayur m BuryatDerived from Sanskrit आयु
(ayu) meaning "life, longevity".
Azal f PersianAzal is a name used in mostly Western Asia, it is also sometimes a Jewish name. Some boys can have this name but its a little more common for girls to have it.
Azam m & f Arabic, Persian, Urdu, MalayMeans "greater, greatest, paramount" in Arabic, the elative of عظيم
(ʿaẓīm) meaning "magnificent, great". It is used as a feminine name in Iran, while it is masculine elsewhere.
Azaz m Arabic, BiblicalMeans "strong, mighty" in Hebrew. In the Bible, this is the name of a Reubenite, the father of
Bela. It is also the name of a city in Syria.
Azem m Biblical HebrewFrom Hebrew "עצם" meaning: strenuous, bone, self-same, strength, might. It is also an unidentified site in the Negev of Judah toward the Edomite border, mentioned in the King James Version of Biblical Book of Joshua(15:29; 19:1–3).
Azha m & f AstronomyMeans "the breeding place" in Arabic. This is the traditional name of the star Eta Eridani in the constellation
Eridanus.
Azhy f YiMeans "third sister" in Yi.
Azin f PersianMeans "beauty, adornment". In ancient Persian, it meant "creed, system".
Azio m Italian (Rare)Derived from the Latin
axio meaning "owl". It can also be a variant of
Azzo. It is rarely used because Azio is the Italianization of Actium, the town where Octavian gained his celebrated victory over Antony and Cleopatra, on September 2, 31 BCE.
Azka f & m Arabic, Indonesian, UrduMeans "purer, more befitting, better" in Arabic, ultimately from the root زكا
(zakā) meaning "to be good or just, to be suitable". It is sometimes used as a masculine name in Indonesia, while it is solely feminine elsewhere.
Azli m MalayDerived from Arabic أصلي
('aṣliyy) meaning "original, authentic, first, initial".
Azou f BretonMeaning uncertain, possibly derived from a Breton surname meaning "healthy man" or "artisan".
Azul f & m Spanish, Filipino (Rare), HistoryFrom Spanish
azul meaning "blue". This name was borne by the ninth and last wife of the Apache leader
Geronimo. A known bearer is Azul Guaita (2001-), a Mexican television actress.
Azur m BosnianBosnian male form of
Azure. Number 96 in top 100 in 2012 for Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Azza f ArabicPossibly meaning "young female gazelle", deriving from the Arabic word
azaza ("it was dear, it was expensive" referring to the difficulty in catching young gazelles).
Tabo m East Frisian, DutchFrisian short form of names that have Gothic
thiuda or Middle High German
diet (both of which mean "people") for a first element, and of which the second element starts with a "b." The names
Dietbald and
Theudebert are good examples of that.
Tacy f English (Rare)Variant of
Tacey. In the
Betsy-Tacy series of children's books by American writer Maud Hart Lovelace (1892-1980), it is a diminutive of
Anastacia.
Tael m Popular CultureFrom the fairy character from the video game
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask. He is the brother of
Tatl, the game's main fairy companion.
Tae-u m KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 泰 "great, exalted, superior; big" and 愚 "stupid, doltish, foolish".
Tafa m & f YorubaMeans "belonging to the white oracle" in Yoruba, derived from
ti meaning "belonging to",
àlà meaning "white cloth; banner" and
ifá meaning "divination; oracle". It is possibly used as diminutive of a longer name as well.
Taft m EnglishTransferred use of the surname
Taft in honor of famous bearer President William Taft.
Taha m TeluguMeaning "Best", "Pure", "Skillful". It is also another Name for the Prophet Muhammad, Name of a Surah in the Quran.
Tahi m BatakMeans "intention, goal" in Toba Batak.
Tahj m African American (Modern)Variant of
Taj (which in turn was used by American musician Tito Jackson, a member of the Jackson 5, for his first son born 1973 - Toriano Adaryll 'Taj' Jackson Jr... [
more]
Tahu m Maori, Polynesian MythologyMeans "to cook" and "sweetheart" in Māori. Tahu is the god of food and feasts, and the embodiment of the dining hall in Māori mythology.
Taia f MaoriMeans "to paint, to tattoo" in Māori.
Taif f & m ArabicMeaning a phantom, wraith or vision. It also means spectrum.
Taig m ManxManx cognate of
Tadg. This name was traditionally Anglicized as the etymologically unrelated
Timothy.
Taio m Yoruba, PapuanVariant of
Tayo. A famous bearer is British singer-songwriter Taio Cruz (1985-), born Adetayo Ayowale Onile-Ere, the son of a Nigerian father and Brazilian mother.
Tair f HebrewMeans "(she) will light up" in Hebrew, making it relative to
Yair.
Tait m Old NorsePossibly a short form of
Teitur and/or derived from Old Norse teitr “cheerful, merry”.
Taka m & f JapaneseFrom 鷹 (
taka) meaning "hawk, falcon, eagle". Other kanji or kanji combinations are possible.... [
more]
Take m JapaneseFrom Japanese 威 (take) meaning "intimidate", 岳 (take) meaning "mountain peak", 巌 (take) meaning "rock", 丈 (take) meaning "height", 竹 (take) meaning "bamboo" or 武 (take) meaning "military, martial"... [
more]
Taki f JapaneseFrom Japanese kanji 滝 (
taki) or 瀧 (
taki) both meaning "waterfall". It can be also the combination of 多 (
ta) meaning "much; many" combined with 希 (
ki) meaning "hope" or 樹 (
ki) meaning "tree"... [
more]
Taku m JapaneseThis name can be used as 拓 (taku, hira.ku) meaning "clear (the land), open, break up (land)", 卓 (taku) meaning "eminent, table, desk, high", 琢 (taku, miga.ku) meaning "polish" or 択 (taku, era.bu) meaning "choose, select, elect, prefer."... [
more]
Tala f Philippine MythologyMeans "star" in Tagalog, ultimately from Sanskrit तारा
(tārā). In Tagalog mythology, Tala is the goddess of stars and a daughter of the supreme deity
Bathala.
Tāle f Latvian (Rare)Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include an adoption of Low German and Frisian
Tale, a short form of
Natālija and a derivation from Latvian
tāle "far, far away".
Tale m & f West Frisian, Norwegian, East FrisianAs a masculine name in Friesland, this name is usually a short form of names containing the Old High Germanic element
adal "noble." But in Scandinavia, it is often a variant form of
Tole... [
more]
Tale m AzerbaijaniMeans "fate, destiny, fortune" in Azerbaijani, ultimately from Arabic طالع
(ṭāli').
Tama f Hebrewmeans "Pure, innocent, honest" in hebrew.
Tame m West FrisianFrisian short form of names that have
thanc for a first element, and of which the second element starts with an "m." The name
Dankmar is a good example of that.
Tame m MorioriMeaning of this name is apparently unknown. This was the name of the last full blooded Moriori (Owenga and Otonga tribes) Tame Horomona Rehe aka Tommy Solomon (1884-1933) and Moriori elder Tame Tainui Tawarere.