Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which a substring is l or o.
gender
usage
contains
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Hala f Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Elizabeth via Halżbieta.
Halafta m Ancient Aramaic
Means "willow" in Aramaic.
Halaga f Filipino
Means Value, worthy in Filipino. Filipino diminutive of the name Hala.
Halah f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic هالة (see Hala).
Halaina f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Helena, the spelling possibly influenced by Alaina.
Halaki f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Charlotte.
Halani f Hawaiian
Means "breath of heaven" in Hawaiian.
Halənur f Azerbaijani
From the Arabic هالة (hala) meaning "halo around the moon" combined with نور (nur) meaning "light".
Halas m Somali
Meaning: Halas generally means "good" or "positive" in Somali.... [more]
Halateya f Belarusian (Rare)
Belarusian form of Galatea.
Halawa f Medieval Arabic (Moorish)
Means "sweetness" in Arabic.
Halbernus m Old Norse
Latinized form of Hallbiǫrn.
Halbert m American
Transferred use of the surname Halbert.
Halbertus m Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Albertus.
Halbiorn m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Hallbiǫrn.
Halcia f Polish
Diminutive of Halina.
Halcyoneus m Greek Mythology (Latinized), Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Ἁλκυονεύς (Halkyoneus), which is the masculine form of Halkyone (see Halcyone). In real life, Halcyoneus (also called Alcyoneus) was a son of Antigonus Gonatas, king of Macedonia (3rd century BC).
Haldan m Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Halfdan.
Halden m Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Halfdan.
Haldetrude f Frankish
Haldetrude was a queen of Neustria, the first wife of Chlothar II. She was likely born around 575 - 594 and died around 604 - 629. She was the mother of Merovech, who was captured during a campaign against Burgundy and killed on orders of Brunhilda; Emma, married in 618 to Eadbald (died 640), King of Kent, though recently it has been suggested that she may have instead been the daughter of Erchinoald, mayor of the palace in Neustria; and Dagobert I (c... [more]
Haldir m Literature
A character in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. An Elf of Lothlorien, Haldir is the one who guides the Fellowship through the forest and brings them before Galadriel and Celeborn.
Haldis f Norwegian, Faroese
From the Old Norse name Halldís, which was composed of the elements hallr "rock" (compare Haldor) and dís "goddess".
Haldo m Estonian (Archaic)
Variant of Aldo and short form of Haldur.
Haldun m Turkish
Turkish form of Khaldoun.
Hale m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Harry.
Haleakalā f Hawaiian
Means "house of the sun" in Hawaiian. Its usage was likely inspired by the crater of the same name in Maui.
Halee f English
Variant of Hayley.
Haleem m Arabic, Urdu, Dhivehi
Alternate transcription of Arabic حليم (see Halim), as well as the Urdu and Dhivehi form.
Haleema f Arabic, Urdu, Dhivehi
Alternate transcription of Arabic حليمة (see Halima), as well as the Urdu and Dhivehi form.
Haleh f Persian
Persian form of Hala.
Háleikr m Old Norse
Old Norse combination of hǫð "battle" and leikr "game", "play", "sport", "fight".
Haleli f Hebrew (Modern)
Means "praise me" in Hebrew and derives from the root הלל, meaning "praise" (see Hallel)
Halema f Arabic, Bengali
Alternate transcription of Halima as well as the Bengali form.
Halemano m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Herman.
Halen m & f English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Halen.
Halena f Ukrainian (Archaic)
Archaic Ukrainian variant of Helena.
Halena f Sorbian
Lower Sorbian variant of Alena 1.
Halenur f Turkish
Combination of Hale 1 and Nur.
Halewijn m Medieval Dutch
Name of the titular character in of the well-known Dutch medieval ballad "Heer Halewijn zong een liedekijn"/"The Song of Lord Halewijn".
Hálfdán m Icelandic
Icelandic variant of Hálfdan.
Halfred m Literature
Halfred of Overhill was a Hobbit of the Shire and a member of the Gamgee family.
Hälge m Swedish (Rare)
Variant of Helge. Hälge is the name of a cartoon moose in Sweden, from Swedish älg meaning "moose".
Hälghe m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Helgi.
Halhal f Medieval Arabic (Moorish)
Meaning "agitation".
Hali f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Holly.
Hali f & m Greek
"The sea"
Hali'a f Hawaiian
Means "fond remembrance" in Hawaiian.
Halia f Greek Mythology
Means "briny" in Greek. In Greek mythology she was the personification of sea salt, a sea nymph native to the Isle of Rhodes (sometimes believed to be one of the indigenous Rhodian gods) and the favourite of Poseidon... [more]
Halia f Hawaiian
Directly taken from Hawaiian hali'a meaning "memory of a loved one, cherished or loving memory". It made the top 100 in Hawaii for the first time in 2020, the year of the Covid19 pandemic.
Halicia f English
Alternate spelling of Alice
Halid m Bosnian, Indonesian, Filipino, Maranao, Maguindanao, Tausug
Form of Khalid used in various languages.
Halida f Indonesian, Bosnian
Indonesian and Bosnian form of Khalida.
Halie f English
Variant of Hallie or Hayley.
Halif m Arabic
Means "he swore" in Arabic
Halikaka f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Harriet.
Halil İbrahim m Turkish
Combination of Halil and İbrahim.
Həlimə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Halima.
Halimeda f Literature
Form of Halimede used by Barbara Kingsolver in her novel 'Animal Dreams' (1990).
Halimnye m Xhosa
Means “not one” in Xhosa.
Halimo f Somali
Somali form of Halima.
Halimon m Belarusian
Belarusian name derived from the Greek name Philemon. It means "loving, giving love".
Halin m Karachay-Balkar
Karachay-Balkar form of Khalim.
Halinda f English
Combination of Ha (from names like Hannah or Hayley) and Linda
Halineczka f Polish
Diminutive of Halina.
Halinor f Popular Culture
Possibly an elaborated form of Elinor. Created for the comic book series 'W.I.T.C.H.'. In the story, Halinor was the original Guardian of Fire.
Halip m Gascon
Gascon form of Philip.
Halis m Turkish
Means "pure" in Turkish, ultimately from Arabic خالص (khāliṣ).
Halise f Turkish
Feminine form of Halis.
Halisi f Swahili
Means "genuine" in Swahili.
Halisia f Polish
Diminutive of Halina.
Haliya f Persian, Arabic
Means "adorned with jewelry" in Arabic.
Haliya f Filipino, Philippine Mythology
Haliya is the name of a Bicolano moon deity. There is an ancient ritual named after her performed in Bicol during the full moon, which was believed to frighten away Bakunawa, a serpent-like dragon in Philippine mythology... [more]
Haliza f Malay, Indonesian
Meaning uncertain, probably of Arabic origin.
Halja f Estonian
Derived from Estonian haljas "verdant".
Halja f Ukrainian
Ukrainian diminutive of Halyna.
Haljand m Estonian
Haljand is an Estonian masculine given name derived from the Estonian language "haljas" meaning "green" and "verdant".
Haljna f Ukrainian
Alternate transcription of Halyna
Halka f Ukrainian, Polish (Rare)
Diminutive of Halyna (Ukrainian) or Halina (Polish).
Halkin m Medieval English
Medieval diminutive of Harry, derived from Hal combined with the diminutive suffix -kin.
Halla f Icelandic, Old Norse, Finnish, Norwegian (Archaic), Faroese
Feminine form of Hallr. Halla is also a Finnish word for an occasion when in growing season temperature lowers so much that ground gets covered with frost.
Halla m & f Korean
Of uncertain etymology.
Hallabera f Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Hallbera.
Hallar m Estonian
Variant of Hellar.
Hallbera f Old Norse, Icelandic, Faroese
Derived from Old Norse hallr meaning "flat stone, slab, big stone, boulder" (compare Hallr, Halli) and (the hypothetical reconstructed root) *ber- "bear" (also found in the noun berserkr), making it a feminine equivalent of Hallbjörn.
Hallbiǫrn m Old Norse
Variant transcription of ᚼᚢᛚᛒᚢᚱᛁᚾ (see Hallbjǫrn).
Hallbiorn m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Hallbiǫrn.
Hallbjørn m Norwegian (Rare), Faroese (Rare)
Norwegian and Faroese form of Hallbjǫrn.
Halldís f Icelandic, Old Norse
Icelandic and Old Norse form of Haldis.
Hallee f English
Variant of Hallie.
Hallelujah f & m English (Rare)
From the English word hallelujah, uttered in worship or as an expression of rejoicing, ultimately from Hebrew הַלְּלוּיָהּ (halleluyah) meaning "praise ye the Lord."
Hallet m Medieval English
Diminutive of Henry.
Halley f & m English, Portuguese (Brazilian)
Transferred use of the surname Halley. It peaked in popularity in 1986, when Halley's Comet was last spotted from Earth. It rose again in the US in the mid 1990's when similar-sounding names (like Haley and Hallie) were increasing in popularity.
Hallfreðr m Old Norse
From Old Norse hallr "rock" and friðr "peace".
Hallfríðr f Old Norse
From Old Norse hallr "rock" combined with fríðr "beautiful".
Hallfríður f & m Icelandic, Faroese
Icelandic feminine form of Hallfríðr and modern Faroese masculine form of Hallfreðr.
Hallgeir m Norwegian
Modern form of Hallgeirr.
Hallgeirr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse hallr "rock" combined with Old Norse geirr "spear".
Hallgerð f Faroese
Faroese younger form of Hallgerðr.
Hallgerðr f Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements hallr "stone, rock" and garðr "enclosure", "protection".
Hallgerður f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Hallgerðr.
Hallgrim m Norwegian
Modern Norwegian form of Hallgrímr.
Hallgrímr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse hallr "rock" combined with Old Norse grîma "mask".
Hallgrímur m Icelandic, Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese form of Hallgrímr. It was borne by Icelandic poet and clergyman Hallgrímur Pétursson (1614-1674).
Hallgunn f Faroese, Norwegian (Rare)
Combination of Old Norse hallr "stone, rock" and gunnr "battle, fight".
Hallgunnur f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Hallgunn.
Halli f English
Variant of Hallie.
Halliwell m English (Rare)
Transferred use of a surname Halliwell.
Hallmar m Icelandic, Faroese, Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Combination of the Old Norse name elements hallr "flat stone, flat rock" and mærr "famous".
Hallmundr m Old Norse
Derived from Old Norse hallr "rock" combined with Old Norse mundr "protection."
Hallny f Swedish
Swedish form of Hallný.
Hallný f Icelandic (Archaic)
Derived from Old Norse hallr meaning "(flat) stone, slab" and nýr meaning "new".
Hallosheth m Biblical Hebrew
Meaning, "enchanter."
Hallur m Icelandic, Faroese
Modern Icelandic and Faroese form of Hallr.
Hallvarður m Icelandic, Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese younger form of Hallvarðr.
Hallvör f Icelandic
Icelandic younger form of Hallvǫr.
Hallvǫr f Old Norse
Ancient Scandinavian feminine name with the combination of hallr "stone, rock" and vár "spring".
Hally f English
Variant of Hallie.
Hally m English
Diminutive of Harry.
Hallye f English
A variant spelling of Hallie.
Hálmar m Faroese
Faroese variant of Hallmar.
Haloke f Navajo
Salmon
Halola m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Harold.
Halomoan m Batak
Means "wish, desire" in Batak.
Halona f Hawaiian
Means "peering; place from which to peer, place to peer at, lookout" in Hawaiian.
Halona m & f Iroquois
Halona is a unisex name that means "Of good fortune"
Halosydne f Greek Mythology
Means "sea-fed" or "sea-born" from Greek ἅλς (halos) "sea" and ὑδνέω (hydneo) "to nourish". This was an epithet of the Greek goddess Amphitrite.
Halphas m Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
A demon listed in the Ars Goetia
Halrloprillalar f Literature
Halrloprillalar (Prill for short) is a character from Larry Niven's book RINGWORLD. She is from the species that created the Ringworld, known as the engineers.
Háls m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Hals.
Hals m Old Norse, Old Danish, Old Swedish
Old Norse name and byname, from Old Norse hals "throat", "neck".
Halsey m & f English
Transferred use of the surname Halsey. The name is probably given in honour of the American war hero Admiral William "Bull" Halsey, Jr... [more]
Halston m & f English
Transferred use of the surname Halston. May also be a variation of Halsten.
Halszka f Polish
Diminutive of Elżbieta via its archaic variant Halżbieta.
Halt m Popular Culture
A name created by John Flanagan for his series 'Ranger's Apprentice' in which Halt is an old Ranger who takes on an apprentice.
Halti m & f Finnish
From the name of a Finnish fell, Halti (Háldi in Northern Sami).... [more]
Haluka m German (Rare, ?)
Variant transcription of Haruka.... [more]
Halusia f Polish
Diminutive of Halina.
Halvarður m Faroese
Faroese variant of Hallvarður.
Hálvdan m Faroese
Faroese form of Hálfdan.
Halvo f Uzbek
Means "bitter almond" in Uzbek.
Halwya f Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Halvi.
Halwyn m Welsh
Means "salt" in Welsh.
Halya f Ukrainian
Ukrainian diminutive of Halyna.
Halyl m Turkmen
Turkmen form of Khalil.
Hamadou m Western African
Form of Hamad or Hammad used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Hamako f Japanese
From Japanese 浜 (hama) meaning "beach, seashore" or 濱 (hama) meaning "beach, sea coast" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hamal m Astronomy
Derived from the Arabic راس الحمل (rās al-ħamal) meaning "head of the ram". The brightest star in the Aries constellation.
Hamall m Old Norse
From Old Norse hamall meaning "castrated male sheep, wether".
Ħamallu m Maltese
Maltese form of Christopher.
Hamamelis f German (Modern, Rare)
Hamamelis is the botanical name of a shrub known as "Witch-hazel" or "winterbloom".... [more]
Həmayıl f Azerbaijani
Means "amulet, talisman" in Azerbaijani, ultimately from Arabic حمائل (ḥamā'il).
Hambali m Indonesian
From the name of 9th-century Islamic jurist and theologian Ahmad ibn Hanbal, who founded the Hanbali school (madhhab) of Sunni Islam.
Hamble m English
Transferred use of the surname Hamble.
Hamdoun m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic حمدون (see Hamdun).
Hamelmal f Amharic
Means "From The Bible" or "The Word".
Hamelot m Medieval English
Diminutive of Hamon and Hamond.
Hamengkubuwono m Javanese, Indonesian
Means "guardian of the world" in Javanese. It comes from the current ruling royal house of the Yogyakarta Sultanate in Indonesia
Hamidjon m Uzbek, Tajik
From the given name Hamid 1 combined with Persian جان (jān) meaning "soul, life".
Hamidou m Western African
Form of Hamid 1 or Hamid 2 used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Hamidullo m Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Hamidullah.
Hamilkár m Hungarian
Cognate of Hamilcar, meaning "brother of Melqart".
Hāmiora m Maori
Maori form of Samuel.
Hamisoa m & f Malagasy
From the Malagasy hamy meaning "sweetness" and soa meaning "good".
Hamlin m American (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Hamlin. A notable bearer is American author Hamlin Garland (1860-1940) who wrote fictional works about life in the Midwest.
Hamlo m Georgian (Rare)
Short form of Hamlet.
Hammod m Arabic (Rare)
Variant spelling meaning "to praise, to commend".
Hammod m English (Rare)
Perhaps from Hammond
Hammonia f German (Rare, Archaic)
The allegoric personification of the city of Hamburg. Extremely rare as a given name for persons.
Hammouda m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant of Hamouda (chiefly Tunisian).
Hamonangan m Batak
Means "victory" in Toba Batak.
Hamonet m Medieval English
Diminutive of Hamon and Hamond.
Hamoni f Japanese
From Japanese 葉 (ha) meaning "leaf", 萌 (mo) meaning "bud, sprout" or 奏 (ha) meaning "play music, complete", 波 (ha) meaning "wave" combined with 似 (i) meaning "becoming", 音 (moni) meaning "sound", 萌 (moni) meaning "bud, sprout" or 望 (moni) meaning "to hope"... [more]
Hamoon m Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian هامون (see Hamoun).
Hamor m Biblical
Hamor was the father of Shechem. Shechem defiled Dinah according to Genesis 34.
Hámóðr m Old Norse
Old Norse combination of ha (Germanic element) and móðr "mind; wrath; courage".
Hamoud m Arabic
Derived from Arabic حَمِدَ (ḥamida) meaning "to praise, to commend". It is etymologically related to Muhammad, Ahmad, and Hamid 1.
Hamouda m Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi variant of Hamoud.
Hamoun m Persian
Means "plain, level ground, desert" in Persian.
Hamoura f Polynesian Mythology
Polynesian origin name, probably meaning "living flame", or "eternal breath".
Hampsicora m History
Meaning unknown. Could be a Latin form of Ampsaga, the name of a river (today known as Rhummel in Algerian Arabic) bordering with the Numidian Massylii in the vicinity of Cirta.... [more]
Hampton m English
Transferred use of the surname Hampton.
Hamson m Literature
Hamson Gamgee was a Hobbit of the Shire.
Hamuel m Biblical, Biblical Latin
Form of Hammuel used in the Douay-Rheims Bible (1582-1610), the Clementine Vulgate (1592) and the Nova Vulgata ("Neo-Vulgate", 1979). The latter two are respectively the former and current official Bible of the Roman Catholic Church.
Hamul m Biblical
Hamul was a son of Pharez of the Tribe of Judah according to Genesis 46:12 and Numbers 26:21. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.
Hanagumo f Japanese
Cloud of flowers, likely a reference to trees full of low-hanging cherry blossoms.
Hanaiakamalama f & m Hawaiian
A compound name in Hawaiian meaning "work of the moon" or "guardian of the moon," derived from:... [more]
Hanalei f & m Hawaiian
Means "crescent bay" from Hawaiian hana "bay" and lei. It is sometimes used as the Hawaiian form of Henry.
Hanameel m Biblical
Hanameel, meaning "rest from God," a cousin of Jeremiah from whom the latter bought property. Jeremiah 32:7ff.
Hananeel m Hebrew
Means "God graciously gave" in Hebrew.
Hananel m Hebrew
Hebrew. This is a traditional, though seldom-used, Jewish name. It means "God is gracious". Ultimately, it derives from the same Hebrew root as John and Anne.
Hanano f Japanese
From the Japanese 華 (hana) meaning "flower", 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens" and 埜 (no) meaning "field, plain". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Hananto m Javanese
Variant of Ananto.
Hanao f & m Japanese
From Japanese 花 or 華 (hana) both meaning "flower" combined with 桜 (o) meaning "cherry blossom" (usually feminine) or 郎 (o) meaning "son". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hanayo f Japanese
From 花 (hana) meaning "flower" and 代 (yo) meaning "world". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Hanbilek f Karachay-Balkar
From the Turkic title khan meaning "king, ruler" and билек (bilek) meaning "hand" or "support, hope".
Han-boram m & f Korean (Rare)
From Boram prefixed with 한 (han), either a determiner from the numeral Hana meaning "one," or the present determiner form of adjective 하다 (hada) meaning "big, large, great."
Han-byeol f & m Korean (Modern)
From Byeol prefixed with 한 (han), either a determiner from the numeral Hana meaning "one," or the present determiner form of adjective 하다 (hada) meaning "big, large, great."... [more]
Handforth f English (Puritan)
Probably from an English surname that was originally from the name of Handforth, a town in Cheshire, England. Also compare the variant Handford.
Hando m Estonian
Variant of Ando.
Handoko m Javanese
From Javanese andaka meaning "bull, ox".
Handroš m Sorbian (Archaic)
Obsolete variant of Handrij.
Handsome m English
From the English word "handsome" meaning "attractive; good-looking".
Haneko f Japanese (Rare)
From the Japanese elements 羽 (hane) meaning "feather, plume", and 子 (ko) meaning "child, sign of the rat". Other kanji combinations can spell this name.
Hanelora f Sorbian
Sorbian borrowing of Hannelore.
Han-eol m & f Korean (Modern)
From an archaic variant of Haneul (compare Han-ul and Hanul).
Ha-Neul m & f Korean
Alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 하늘 (see Haneul).
Haneul-bit f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Haneul and Bit (compare Bit-haneul).
Haneul-byeol f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Haneul and Byeol (compare the more common Byeol-ha).
Haneulbyeollimgureumhaennimbodasarangseureouri f Korean
This 16-hangul-character given name translates to "lovelier than the Sky, Stars, Clouds, and Sun~". Since 1993, regulations in South Korea have prohibited the registration of given names longer than five hangul characters, in response to some parents giving their children extremely long names such as this... [more]
Hangerjettle f Alsatian (Archaic)
Vernacular diminutive of Henriette.
Hangil m Korean
A Native-Korean name that means "One Way", "One Path", or "One Direction".
Han-gyeol m & f Korean (Modern)
From native Korean 한결 (hangyeol) meaning "uniformity," effectively a combination of determiner 한 (han), from the numeral Hana meaning "one" (can also come from the present determiner form of adjective 하다 (hada) meaning "big, large, great"), and 결 (gyeol) meaning "layer, ply; chance, opportunity, moment."
Haníbal m Galician
Galician form of Hannibal.
Hanibal m Croatian (Rare), Slovene (Rare)
Croatian and Slovene form of Hannibal.
Haniël m Dutch
Dutch form of Haniel.
Haniel m Biblical, Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend, Brazilian
Variant of Hanniel used in the King James Version of 1 Chronicles 7:39, where it belongs to one of the sons of Ulla "and a prince and hero of the tribe of Asher"... [more]
Hanindyo m Javanese
Javanese variant of Anindyo.
Hankali m & f Hausa
Means "intelligent" in Hausa.
Hanko f Japanese
From Japanese 汎 (han) meaning "float, drift" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other combinations of kanji characters are also possible.
Hanko m Bulgarian
Derived from Protobulgarian хан "khan".
Hanley m & f English, Caribbean
Derived from the surname Hanley.
Hanlin m English
Transferred use of the surname Hanlin.
Hanmo f Chinese
From the Chinese 寒 (hán) meaning "cold, wintry" and 默 (mò) meaning "silent, quiet, still, dark".
Hanmölek f Karachay-Balkar
From the Turkic title khan meaning "king, ruler" and Arabic ملك (malak) meaning "angel".
Hannahlee f English (Rare)
Combination of Hannah and Lee.
Hannalee f Literature
Used in the novel 'Turn Homeward, Hannalee' as a combinatione of Hanna and Lee.
Hannaleena f Finnish
Finnish form of Hannalena.
Hannalei f English (Modern, Rare)
Very rare elaboration of Hannah.
Hannalena f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish combination of Hanna and Lena.
Hannalie f Afrikaans
Contraction of Hanna and Elisabeth.