Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the starting sequence is m or d or p; and a substring is l or k or y.
gender
usage
starts with
contains
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Diony m Filipino
Diminutive of Dionisio.
Dionysakis m Greek
Modern Greek diminutive of Dionysios, as it contains the modern Greek diminutive suffix -άκης (-akis). This name is typically only used informally, meaning: it does not appear on birth certificates.
Dionysie f Czech
Variant form of Dionysia.
Dionysikles m Ancient Greek
Means "glory of Dionysos", from the name of the god Dionysos combined with Greek κλέος (kleos) meaning "glory".
Dionysis m Greek
Variant of Dionysios.
Dionysodorus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Dionysodoros. This name was borne by Dionysodorus of Caunus, an ancient Greek mathematician from the 2nd century BC.
Dionyza f Theatre
Presumably a feminine form of Dionysos. This was used by Shakespeare for a character in his comedy 'Pericles, Prince of Tyre' (1607).
Dionyzas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Dionysos via its latinized form Dionysus.
Diophilos m Ancient Greek
Means "friend of Zeus", derived from Greek Διος (Dios) "of Zeus" combined with Greek φιλος (philos) "friend, lover".
Dìorbhail f Scottish Gaelic
Scottish cognate of Dearbháil. This name used to be Anglicized as the etymologically unrelated Dorothy.
Diorval f Manx
Manx cognate of Dìorbhail.
Dioskor m Russian, Serbian
Russian and Serbian form of Dioskoros.
Dioskorides m Ancient Greek
Means "son of Dioskoros" in Greek, derived from the name Dioskoros combined with the patronymic suffix ἴδης (ides).
Dioskoros m Ancient Greek
Derived from Greek Διός (Dios) meaning "of Zeus" combined with the Greek noun κόρος (koros) meaning "son, boy, lad."
Dioskourides m Ancient Greek
Means "son of Dioskouros" in Greek, derived from the name Dioskouros combined with the patronymic suffix ἴδης (ides).
Dioskouros m Ancient Greek
Epic and Ionic Greek form of Dioskoros, because it contains κοῦρος (kouros), which is the Epic and Ionic Greek form of κόρος (koros) meaning "son, boy, lad."
Dioskur m Polish
Polish form of Dioscorus.
Diosmary f Spanish (Latin American, Rare)
Variant of Josmary apparently influenced by Spanish Dios "God". It was used for a character in the Venezuelan telenovela 'Toda una dama' (2007-2008).
Dioszkorosz m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Dioskoros.
Diotaleva f Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings.
Diotalevo m Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings. It was borne from the nobleman Diotalevo Diotalevi.
Diotalleva f Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings.
Diotallevi m Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings.
Diotallevia f Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings.
Diotallevio m Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings. It was borne from the painter Diotallevio D'Antonio.
Diotallevo m Italian
Medieval name given to foundlings or infants with precarious health, probably at the basis of the Italian surname Diotallevi, in turn given to foundlings.
Dipankar m Bengali, Assamese
Bengali and Assamese form of Dipankara.
Dipankara m Sanskrit, Buddhism
Means "causer of light", from Sanskrit दीप (dīpa) meaning "light, lamp" and कर (kara) meaning "maker, doer"... [more]
Dipesalema m Tswana
Means "psalms" in Tswana.
Dipsy m Popular Culture
The name of one of the Teletubbies who are green.
Dirayr m Armenian
Meaning unknown.
Dirck m Medieval Dutch
Medieval Dutch form of Dirk.
Direk m Thai
Means "prosper, be plentiful, be abundant" in Thai.
Dirick m Medieval Baltic
Medieval Latvian form of Dietrich.
Dirik m German (Rare), English (American, Rare)
Shortned form of Dietrich, compare also Dirk.
Dirkie m Afrikaans
Diminutive of Dirk.
Dirli m & f Dagbani
Means "sharp one" in Dagbani.
Dirvolira f Baltic Mythology
Lithuanian goddess whose name and function are a complete mystery. She was recorded in documents written by Jesuit monks between 1580 and 1620.
Disaaka m & f Akan
Means "you deserve saying it" in Akan.
Disciole f History (Ecclesiastical)
Meaning unknown. The 6th-century Frankish saint Disciole (or Disciola), a niece of Saint Salvius of Albi and a favourite companion of Queen Radegund, "was noted for her saintly death, which is described in detail by Gregory of Tours".
Disciplina f Roman Mythology
Derived from Latin disciplina, meaning "instruction; discipline". In Roman mythology, Disciplina was a minor deity and the personification of discipline.
Discipline m English (Puritan)
Middle English (in the sense ‘mortification by scourging oneself’) via Old French from Latin disciplina ‘instruction, knowledge’, from discipulus. Referring to Hebrews 12:11.
Dísella f Icelandic (Modern)
Combination of the Old Norse name element dís "goddess; woman, lady; sister" or dis "wise woman, seeress; woman, virgin" and Ella 2.
Diseye f & m Ijaw
Means "desired" in Ijaw.
Dishyanth m Indian
From Telugu meaning "cute".
Disket f Ladakhi
Ladakhi form of Diki.
Diskit f Ladakhi
Ladakhi form of Diki.
Disko m Literature
In the case of Disko Troop, a character in Rudyard Kipling's novel 'Captains Courageous' (1897), it was taken from the name of Disko Island, off the west coast of Greenland, given "because he was born on board his father's ship when it was iced near the island".
Disney f & m Spanish (Latin American, Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare), English (American, Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Disney, given after American filmmaker Walt Disney (1901-1966) and his company.
Disya m & f Russian
Diminutive of Denis or Diana.
Dithapelo m & f Tswana
Means "prayers" in Setswana.
Diðrik m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Didrik.
Díðrikur m Faroese
Faroese form of Didrik.
Ditka f Kashubian, Slovene
Kashubian short form of Editka and Slovene diminutive of Dita.
Ditlef m Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare)
Swedish and Norwegian form of Detlef.
Ditleivur m Faroese
Faroese form of Ditlev.
Ditlev m Danish
Danish form of Detlef.
Ditshwanelo m & f Tswana
Means "rights" in Setswana.
Ditty f Dutch (Rare), English (Rare)
Diminutive of Diede (Dutch) and Edith (Dutch and English). Also compare Didi, Ditte and Dietje.
Dituška f Slovak
Diminutive form of Edita.
Diuška f Czech, Slovak
Czech and Slovak diminutive of Diana. Also compare Diuša.
Divakar m Tamil
Means "sun god" in Tamil.
Divanya f Indonesian (Rare), Indian (Rare)
Possibly from Sanskrit दिव्य (divyá) meaning "divine, heavenly" (see Divya).
Divine-authority m English (Puritan)
derived from the authority of God, referring to the Scripture. Popular with Puritans
Divinity f African American (Modern)
Middle English from Old French divinite, from Latin divinitas, from divinus ‘belonging to a deity.’
Divko m Croatian (Rare)
Masculine form of Divna.
Divyae m Indian, Hindi, Hinduism, Malayalam, Gujarati, American, Punjabi, Tamil, Sinhalese
Name - Divyae दिव्य... [more]
Divyana f Indian (Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Divya.
Divyani f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Marathi, Nepali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Bengali, Malayalam, Gujarati, Assamese, Punjabi, Indian (Sikh)
MEANING - Divine, celestial, heavenly, magical, agreeable ... [more]
Divyavāṇi f Telugu
Means "divine speech" in Telugu.
Divye m Sanskrit
Sanskrit word for divine, pure and unique.
Diwakar m Indian
Other name for 'Sun' in Hindu.
Di'wali m Cherokee
Means "the bowl" in Cherokee.
Diya f African, Mbama
Variant of Dia.
Diyaa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ضياء (see Ziya).
Diyae m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of ضياء (see Ziya)
Diyah f Javanese
Variant of Dyah.
Diyako m Kurdish
Kurdish form of Deioces.
Diyana f Bulgarian
Bulgarian form of Diana.
Diyana f Uzbek
Uzbek form of Diana.
Diyana f Avestan
Giver of gifts. Charity. Generous. Benevolent.
Diyanah f Malay, Indonesian
Derived from Arabic ديانة (diyanah) meaning "religion, creed".
Diyar m Kazakh, Tatar
Derived from the Persian noun دیار (diyar) meaning "country, land" as well as "homeland".
Diyara f Kazakh
Feminine form of Diyar.
Diyarî f Kurdish
Means "gift" in Kurdish.
Diyigu m Quechua
Quechua form of Diego.
Diyinrin f Ijaw
Means "live life carefully" in Ijaw.
Diyllus m Ancient Greek
Meaning unknown. Diyllus was probably the son of Phanodemus the Atthidographer (a chronicler of the local history of Athens and Attica).
Diyor m Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Diyar.
Diyora f Tajik (Rare), Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Diyara, which is the feminine form of Diyar.
Diyorakhon f Uzbek
From the given name Diyora meaning "clear" combined with the title khan meaning "king, ruler"
Diyosa f Filipino, Tagalog
Means "goddess" in Tagalog.
Diyuan f Chinese
From the Chinese 迪 (dí) meaning "enlighten, progress" and 园 (yuán) meaning "garden, park, orchard".
Djabrail m Chechen
Variant transcription of Dzhabrail.
Djaelani m Indonesian
Older spelling of Jaelani influenced by Dutch orthography.
Djailani m Indonesian
Older spelling of Jailani influenced by Dutch orthography.
Djåke m Walloon
Walloon form of Jacques.
Djalal m Arabic (Maghrebi), Indonesian
Arabic alternate transcription of Jalal chiefly used in Northern Africa as well as an Indonesian form of the same name.
Djali m Albanian
Means "boy" in Albanian taken from the word djalë of the same origin.
Djali f & m Literature, Pet
Possibly a variant transcription of Arabic خالي (jali) meaning "free" (general not only related with freedom).... [more]
Djalil m Indonesian, Arabic (Maghrebi)
Indonesian form of Jalil as well as an alternate transcription of the name chiefly used in Northern Africa.
Djall m Albanian Mythology
Derived from the Latin word diabolus, meaning "devil". In Albanian mythology, Djall, also known as Dreq, is the personification of evil. It is also the name of a demon of fire.
Djalu m Indigenous Australian, Yolngu
Of Australian Aboriginal origin (Yolngu, to be precise) , the meaning of this name is not yet known to me at the moment. A known bearer of this name is Djalu Gurruwiwi, an Australian Aboriginal didgeridoo maker and player.
Djamal m Arabic (Maghrebi), Indonesian
Arabic alternate transcription of Jamal chiefly used in Northern Africa as well as an Indonesian form of the same name.
Djamaldin m Ingush
Variant transcription of Dzhamaldin.
Djamaluddin m Indonesian
Older spelling of Jamaluddin influenced by Dutch orthography.
Djamaludin m Indonesian
Older spelling of Jamaludin influenced by Dutch orthography.
Djambulat m Chechen
Alternate transcription of Джамбулат (see Dzhambulat)
Djameela f Arabic
Variant of Djamila.
Djamel m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Jamal chiefly used in Northern Africa.
Djamil m Arabic (Maghrebi), Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic جميل (see Jamil) chiefly used in North Africa, as well as an older Indonesian variant of the name.
Djamileh f Persian, Theatre
Possibly a Persian form of Jamila.
Djatmiko m Javanese
Older spelling of Jatmiko influenced by Dutch orthography.
Djayden m Dutch
Variant of Jayden.
Djedkare m Ancient Egyptian
Means "enduring is the soul of Re" in Egyptian.
Djedoslav m Croatian, Serbian
The first element of this name is probably derived from Serbo-Croatian djed "grandfather". The second element is derived from Slavic slav "glory". In other words, one could say that this name is the Croatian and Serbian form of Dedoslav.
Djehuty m Egyptian Mythology
From Egyptian ḏḥwtj meaning "he who is like the ibis", the original form of Thoth.
Djelike f Walloon
Walloon form of Angélique.
Djeliza f Albanian
Variant of Diellza.
Djerlaxhe m Walloon
Walloon form of Gerlach.
Djibril m Western African
Form of Jibril used in western Africa.
Djidula m Western African
Means “one who lives peacefully” from the Ewe elements "Dji" which relates to “life,” “to live,” or “spirit” and "Dula" which relates “calm,” “peace,” or “patience”.
Djîle m Walloon
Walloon form of Gilles.
Djimy m Haitian Creole (Rare)
Haitian variant of Jimmy.
Djiyôme m Picard
Picard form of Guillaume.
Djoeke f Dutch, West Frisian
Dutch form of Dieuwke, completely phonetical in its spelling. This "dutchized" form of a Frisian name has also been adopted by the Frisians themselves, though it is nowhere as popular in Friesland as the original form (Dieuwke).
Djoko m Javanese
Older spelling of Joko based on Dutch orthography.
Djulaga m Bosnian, Croatian (Rare)
Alternate spelling of Đulaga.
Djule m Walloon
Walloon form of Jules 1.
Djulén m Walloon
Walloon form of Julien.
Djulene f Walloon
Walloon form of Julienne.
Djulin m Walloon
Variant of Djulén.
Djuliye f Walloon (Rare)
Walloon form of Julie.
Dkarchung m & f Tibetan
Means "little white one" in Tibetian.
Dlawb f Hmong
Variant of Dawb.
D'lloyd m African American
A modern variant of Lloyd.
Dlshad m & f Kurdish
it's a Kurdish name, mainly use as given name for male, the name includes two fraces, the first is /DL/ or /dil/ which means 'heart', and the second part is an adjective 'shad' meaning 'happy', both together means 'happy heart'.... [more]
Długomił m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish długi or długo "long", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьlgъ "long". Also compare Croatian dug "long"... [more]
Długomiła f Polish
Feminine form of Długomił.
Długomir m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish długi or długo "long", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьlgъ "long". Also compare Croatian dug "long"... [more]
Długomysł m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish długi or długo "long", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьlgъ "long". Also compare Croatian dug "long"... [more]
Długosław m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish długi or długo "long", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьlgъ "long". Also compare Croatian dug "long"... [more]
Długosława f Polish
Feminine form of Długosław.
Długosz m Polish
Diminutive of Długomił.
Dlyla f English (American, Rare)
Possibly a spelling variation of Delilah.
Dmitriya f & m Russian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian, Belarusian
Russian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian, and Belarusian form of Demetria, making it the feminine form of Dmitriy, as well as a diminutive of Dmitriy.
Dmytriy m Ukrainian
Variant of Dmytro influenced by Dmitriy.
Doady m Literature
Diminutive of David used in the Charles Dickens novel 'David Copperfield'.
Doak m English (American)
Transferred use of the surname Doak.
Dobby m Popular Culture
The name of a House-Elf in the Harry Potter series of books.
Dobiel m Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
Dobiel, also Dubbiel ("bear-god"), was the guardian angel of Ancient Persia. According to the Talmud, Dobiel was also one of the special accusers of Israel, and once officiated in Heaven for 21 days as a proxy for Gabriel when the latter (over whom Dobiel scored a victory) was in temporary disgrace for taking pity on the Israelites when God was angry with them and convincing the Babylonians to drive them from Babylon rather than kill them.
Dobielut m Polish (Rare), Old Church Slavic
Possibly means "soldier's day" from Slavic doba meaning "day" combined with lut meaning "soldier".
Dobiesław m Polish
Derived from Slavic dob "brave, courageous" combined with Slavic slav "glory".
Dobilas m Lithuanian
Derived from the Lithuanian noun dobilas meaning "clover".
Dobilė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Dobilas.
Dobrilka f Vlach
Vlach diminutive of Dobrila.
Dobrinka f Bulgarian
Diminutive of Dobrina.
Dobrislav m Croatian, Serbian
Variant form of Dobroslav.
Dobrislava f Croatian, Serbian
Feminine form of Dobrislav.
Dobrogey m Slavic Mythology (Russified, Archaic)
The name Dobrogey is a constructed or reconstructed name with roots in Slavic and potentially Indo-European languages. It is primarily associated with modern Rodnovery (Slavic Neopaganism), and as such, lacks concrete historical documentation in ancient texts... [more]
Dobroliub m Bulgarian (Rare)
Variant transcription of Добролюб (see Dobrolyub).
Dobrolyub m Bulgarian
Derived from the Slavic name elements dobru "good" and lyuby "love".
Dobromysł m Polish
Means "good thought", derived from Slavic dobro "good, kind" combined with Polish myśl "thought" (which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic mysliti "to think").
Dobrożyźń f Medieval Polish
Derived from the Slavic name elements dobro "good" and żyźń "fecundity, prolificacy".
Dobryana f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Добриана (see Dobriana).
Dobrymir m Polish
Variant of Dobromir.
Dobrynya m Medieval Russian, Medieval Ukrainian
Means "good virtues", from the old Slavic root *добръ (dobrŭ), meaning "good, kind" and Greek ἀρετή (áretí) meaning "virtue"... [more]
Dobysława f Sorbian
Sorbian cognate of Dobiesława and Dobroslava.
Docelina f Medieval Occitan
Diminutive of Doça and cognate of Douceline.
Docey f English (Archaic)
Diminutive of vernacular form of Docia.
Dock m English (American, Rare)
Either from the surname Dock, or taken directly from the English vocabulary word referring to a structure attached to shore at which a ship can be secured, or the act of harbouring at one.
Dockery m English (American)
Transferred use of the surname Dockery.
Độc Lập m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 獨立 (độc lập) meaning "independence".
Dodalis m Arthurian Cycle
A Saxon king who participated in the Saxon invasion of northern Britain in the early days of Arthur’s reign. He was killed by Agravain at the battle of Cambenic.
Dodoshka f Georgian
Diminutive of Dodo.
Dody f English (American)
Diminutive of Dolores. Could also probably be a variant of Dodie.
Doedeken m Medieval Dutch
Diminutive of Doede.
Doeke m Dutch (Rare), West Frisian
Contracted form of Doedeke, which is a diminutive of Doede, as it contains the Dutch and Frisian diminutive suffix -ke.... [more]
Doğanay m & f Turkish
Means "rising moon" in Turkish, from doğan meaning "rising" and ay meaning "moon".
Dogberry m Literature
Dogberry is a character created by William Shakespeare for his play Much Ado About Nothing. The name probably comes from "dogberry", another name for mountain ash, also called rowan.
Doglas m Portuguese (Brazilian)
Portuguese borrowing of Douglas.
Dohl m Scots
Scots adaption of Domhnall.
Do-Hyun m Korean
Alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 도현 (see Do-Hyeon).
Doibhilin m Irish
Possibly derived from the term dobhail "unlucky".
Doileag f Scottish Gaelic
"World ruler," "doll-like."
Đoka m Serbian
Diminutive of Đorđe.
Dokhor m Karelian
Diminutive form of Dyurgiy.
Dokhsun m Yakut
Means "sporty" in Yakut.
Dokiya f Ukrainian
Short form of Yevdokiya. Dokiya Humenna (1904-1996) was an Ukrainian writer.
Dokka m Chechen
From Chechen доккха (dokqa) meaning "big, large".
Dokkaeo f Thai
From Thai ดอก (dok) meaning "flower" and แก้ว (kaeo) meaning "crystal, glass, diamond". This is also the Thai name for the orange jasmine (a type of flower).
Dokmai f Thai
Means "flower, blossom" in Thai.
Doku m Chechen
Variant of Dokka.
Dókus m Medieval Hungarian
Old Hungarian diminutive of Dávid and Domonkos.
Dol m Jèrriais
Diminutive of Dâlpheusse.
Dola f & m Indian
Derived from Sanskrit dola "swinging, oscillating".
Dolaana f Tuvan
Derived from Mongolian дулаан (dulaan) meaning "warm, kind".
Dolabella m Ancient Roman, Theatre
Roman cognomen which was derived from the Latin noun dolabella meaning "small hatchet, small pick-axe".... [more]
Dolan m American
Transferred use of the surname Dolan.
Dolan m Yakut
Variant of Dolgan.
Dolan m Kalmyk
Means "seven" in Kalmyk. It was traditionally given to the seventh-born child of a family.
Dolanzie m Arthurian Cycle
A Scottish knight in the service of lord Galehaut. Galehaut left him a viceroy of the Giant’s Isle after Tristan conquered it and slew Galehaut’s parents.
Dolapo m & f Yoruba
Means "Double" in Yoruba
Dolce f Judeo-Italian
Derived from Italian dolce "sweet" (compare Dulcie).
Dolceamori f Judeo-Spanish (Archaic)
Means "sweetheart" in Judeo-Spanish.
Dolcelina f Italian
Italian form of Douceline via its latinized form Dulcelina.
Dolcelino m Italian
Italian form of Doucelin via its latinized form Dulcelinus.
Dolcelinu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Dolcelino.
Dolcie f English (British, Modern)
Variant of Dulcie. Popular in the UK.
Dolcina f Italian
Italian form of Dulcina.
Dolcino m Italian
Italian form of Dulcinus.
Dolcissima f Italian (Rare)
Italian form of Latin name Dulcissima, meaning "sweetest", "very sweet" (superlative adjective from dulcis - "sweet"). Saint Dolcissima is a virgin and martyr, a patron saint of Sutri.
Doleswif f Anglo-Saxon
Possibly meant "the wife of Dol(a)", from the genitive of Dol(a) (an Old English masculine name or byname, itself perhaps derived from Old English dol "foolish, erring") combined with Old English wif "woman, wife".
Doletbiy m Circassian (Rare)
Most likely from Persian دولت (dowlat) meaning "state, government, country" (of Arabic origin) combined with the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master".
Dolev m & f Hebrew
Means "plane tree" in Hebrew.
Dolf m Dutch, German, Swedish
Short form of names that end in -dolf, such as Adolf, Ludolf and Rudolf.
Dolfa f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adolfa.
Dolfene f Walloon
Walloon form of Adolphine.
Dolfi m & f Czech (Rare), German
For men, this name is a diminutive of Dolf. For women, it is a diminutive of feminine names that contain -dolf- and -dolph-, such as Adolphine and Rudolfina.... [more]
Dolfijn m Dutch
Dutch form of Adolf via Adolfinus. However, due to the exact similarity with the Dutch word dolfijn meaning "dolphin", there are probably cases where the parents intended to name their son after the marine mammal.
Dolfin m Venetian (Archaic), Medieval Italian (Tuscan)
Derived from the Latin name Delphinus, which meant "of Delphi". Delphi was a city in ancient Greece, the name of which is possibly related to Greek δελφύς (delphys) "womb".
Dolfina f Galician (Rare)
Galician short form of Adolfina.
Dolfine f Dutch (Rare)
Truncated form of Adolfine.
Dolfje m Dutch, Literature, Popular Culture
Dutch diminutive of Dolf, as it contains the Dutch diminutive suffix -je. This name is extremely rare as an official name on birth certificates: it is predominantly used informally, most often on young children.... [more]
Dólfka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Dolfa.
Dolfo m Asturian, Filipino, Italian (Archaic)
Asturian form and Italian variant of Adolfo.... [more]
Dolgfinn m Anglo-Scandinavian
Anglo-Scandinavian form of Dólgfinnr.
Dólgfinnr m Old Norse
Old Norse name (perhaps originally a byname) derived from the elements dólgr meaning "enemy, fiend, battle" (cognate with Old English dolg "a wound, scar") and finnr "Sámi, Laplander".
Dolgion m & f Mongolian
Means "wave" in Mongolian.
Dolgor f Mongolian, Buryat
Mongolian and Buryat form of Dolkar.
Dolgorjav f Mongolian
Combination of the name Dolgor and Mongolian жав (jav) meaning "salvation, deliverance".
Dolgormaa f Mongolian
Combination of the name Dolgor and the Mongolian feminine suffix маа (maa).
Dolgþrasi m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Derived from dolg ("hostility, battle") and þrasa ("to snort, to boast"). This is the name of a dwarf (also called Dolgþvari) in Norse mythology.
Dolgþvari m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Derived from dolg ("battle") and þvari ("staff, sword, spear"). This is the name of a dwarf (also called Dolgþrasi) in Norse mythology.
Dolguuna f Yakut
From долгун (dolgun) meaning "wave".
Doli f Croatian
Croatian form of Dolly.
Doli f Navajo
Derived from the Navajo word dóliiłchíí meaning "bluebird".
Doli m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Diminutive of Dolev.
Dolina f Scottish
Contracted form of Donaldina as well as a Latinate formation based on Gaelic Dolag, itself a feminine diminutive of Donald.
Dolinde f French (Archaic), Dutch (Rare), Afrikaans (Rare)
Archaic French vernacular form of Adelinde found in the Poitou-Charentes region. Today, the name is occasionally found in the Netherlands and in Afrikaans-speaking South Africa... [more]
Dolion m Greek Mythology
Derived from the Greek adjective δόλιος (dolios) meaning "crafty, deceitful, treacherous", which is ultimately derived from the Greek verb δολιόω (dolioo) meaning "to lure, to deceive, to use deceit"... [more]