This is a list of submitted names in which the usage is Estonian or Cornish or Catalan.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Taidi f Estonian (Archaic)Meaning unknown. Compare this name with the similar-looking names
Taida and
Taidas, both of which are in use in Estonia's fellow Baltic country Lithuania.
Taivo m EstonianDerived from Old Estonian
taivas (
taevas in Modern Estonian) "heaven".
Talek m CornishDerived from Cornish
talek "big-browed", ultimately from Old Cornish
talawg "high forehead" or "big brow".
Talwyn f Cornish (Modern)Derived from Cornish
tal "brow; forehead; temple" and
gwynn "fair; white; blessed". This is a modern Cornish name.
Tamara f Cornish, Celtic MythologyIn Cornish folklore, Tamara is a nymph who lived in the underworld and wanted to wander freely in the mortal world, against the advice of her parents. When she falls in love with the giant
Tawradge, she refuses to return to the underworld with her father... [
more]
Tambet m EstonianCoined by Eduard Bornhöhe for a character in his novel 'Tasuja' (1880). The exact origin and meaning of this name are uncertain, it has, however, been speculated that it might be a contraction of Estonian
tammepuust "of oak wood".
Tarvo m Finnish, EstonianDerived from either Old Finnish
tarvas "wild aurochs" or from Estonian
tarv, a dialectal variant of
tarm, "energy, vigour".
Tauri m Estonian20th-century coinage of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from
Kauri or from
Tarvo.
Tõnn m EstonianOriginally a short form of
Tõnis, now used as a given name in its own right.
Treeve m CornishDerived from Cornish
tre "farmstead, dwelling, town, village, home".
Tremaine m & f African American, CornishHistorically a Cornish surname meaning "stone settlement", derived from the Cornish 'tre', meaning a homestead or settlement, and 'men', meaning stone. ... [
more]
Trueth f CornishMeans "compassion" in Cornish. This is a recently coined Cornish name.
Üllo m Estonian, Medieval BalticDerived from Livonian
ilo "joy", this name was mentioned in the Chronicle of Henry of Livonia in its Latinized form
Ylo. The form
Üllo was eventually revived through 19th-century literature; folk etymology has associated the name with Estonian
ülev "exalted" and
üllas "noble" ever since.
Ultus m Catalan, Spanish, Popular CultureFrom the Medieval Latin
Ultimūs, meaning “final”. It is the name of a
Tarzan inspired character who appears in about 14 novels written by film industry veteran
Julián Amich and drawn by
Enrique Pertegás
Ferrer, who also wrote the spinoff comic book centring on him.
Ulvi f EstonianDerived from the place name
Ulvi in Ida-Viru County, Estonia.
Vahur m Estonian, LiteratureCoined by Estonian author Eduard Börnhohe for a character in his 1880 novel 'Tasuja'. Börnhohe allegedly derived the name from Estonian
vahva "brave".
Valve f EstonianDerived from Estonian
valve "to guard; watch over".
Vambola m EstonianFrom a character in a novel with the same name by Estonian writer
Andres Saal (1861-1931). Possibly derived from the name of Varbola castle or from the old Estonian word
vambas, which means "mace".
Vennor m CornishMiddle name of Captain Ross Poldark, the main character in the historical television series Poldark. Ross Vennor Poldark is his full name on the BBC show.
Veryan f & m CornishFrom the name of a Cornish town, which is taken from
Sen Veryan meaning "Saint Veryan", a Cornish corruption of
Severian, itself a corrupted form of
Symphorian (the saint to whom the village church is dedicated)... [
more]
Viia f EstonianOriginally an old Estonian vernacular form of
Sofia, now used as a given name in its own right.