This is a list of submitted names in which the usage is Siberian; and the length is 7.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aiyy Kuo f Yakut (Rare)Means "beautiful Aiyy" from the name of the Yakut Aiyy deities combined with куо
(kuo) meaning "beautiful".
Aldaana f YakutFrom the name of the Aldan River that flows through Yakutia.
Aldynay f TuvanFrom Tuvan алдын
(aldyn) meaning "golden" and ай
(ay) meaning "moon".
Altaana f YakutDerived from Yakut
алтан (altan) meaning "copper".
Ayantay m YakutMeans "the further way", ultimately from Yakut
айан (ayan) meaning "journey".
Bayarma f BuryatDerived from Buryat баяр
(bayar) meaning "joy, happiness".
Dariima f BuryatMeaning unknown, though it is probably of Tibetan-Sanskrit origin.
Darkhan m YakutMeans "honourable, important", or, possibly "proud, arrogant" in Sakha.
Dolaana f TuvanDerived from Mongolian дулаан
(dulaan) meaning "warm, kind".
Erzhena f BuryatDerived from Buryat эржэн
(erzhen) meaning "mother-of-pearl".
Gerelma f BuryatMeans "light mother" in Buryat, from Mongolian гэрэл
(gerel) meaning "light" combined with the suffix -маа
(-maa) meaning "mother".
Irkemes f KhakasPossibly from the Khakas
ирке (irke) meaning "tenderness".
Jantraa f BuryatPossibly from the Buryat
янтаар (jantaar) meaning "amber".
Khırlas f KhakasReferring to the Khakas terms for the months of most or least frost, either November or December.
Korav'ye m ChukchiDerived from the Chukchi word кора-т (
kor-t) meaning "deer".
Kydaana f YakutEither means "blizzard", "cold", or "the sparkle of kydamniir" in Yakut.
Lykhtkk f NivkhMeans "bad weather"; derived from Nivkh
lykh. This name was used on baby girls born on days of inclement weather.
Memzgun m NivkhFrom Nivkh
mem meaning "rainbow"; given to baby boys born during the time of a rainbow.
Mufchik m NivkhDerived from the Nivkh word
mugv meaning "day", being used on children born in the daytime.
Myusena m NenetsMeans "nomadic" in Nenets. This name was traditionally given to baby boys born during a migration.
Niftyuk f NivkhName given to a woman who has had many children, all which died with her.
Nyurgun m YakutDerived from Yakut
ньургуһун (nurguhun) meaning "snowdrop (a type of flower)". Nyurgun is a mythical hero to the Yakuts.
Pitynyl m SelkupMeans "the bottom of the nest" in Selkup. This is usually given to the youngest child.
Rsholin m Nivkh (Archaic)Traditional Nivkh name of unknown meaning. Because most Nivkhs adopted Russian names in the 20th century, it is no longer used in the modern-day.
Rul-tyne f ChukchiEtymology unknown. This was the birth name of Chukchi poet and writer Antonina Kymytval.
Rytkheu m ChukchiMeans "unknown" in Chukchi. A bearer is Yuri Rytkheu, born Rytkheu, a Chukchi-Russian writer.
Sarıada f YakutFrom
сарыал (sarıal) meaning "radiance, halo, shining".
Sayiina f YakutDerived from Yakut сайын
(sayın) meaning "summer".
Soëlmaa f BuryatFrom the Buryat
соёл (soёl) meaning "culture" and the Mongolian feminine suffix
-маа (-maa). Tyne-nny f ChukchiTraditional feminine Chukchi name with an unknown meaning.
Uyakhan f BuryatMeans "gentle, soft" or "flexible, submissive" in Buryat.
Uyguuna f YakutMeans "rich, successful," from Yakut уйгу
(uygu) meaning "wealth".
Vinevyt f ChukchiMeans "deceased" in Chukchi. This name was given to children as a reference the spirits or souls of deceased ancestors or family members.
Yalyane f Siberian, NenetsMeans "light woman". It is given to baby girls as a comparison between them and the sun.
Zorigma f BuryatFrom the Buryat
зориг (zorig) meaning "courage, willpower" and the Mongolian feminine suffix
-маа (-maa).