Before we start:
Spanish names typically consist of a given name (but in this case you can use a middle name) followed by two surnames.
For example, if a man named
Eduardo Fernández Garrido marries a woman named
María Dolores Martínez Ruiz and they have a child named José, he would be
José Fernández Martínez or
José Martínez Fernández, since the first maternal and paternal surnames are taken (the order doesn't matter, but
usually it's
name+paternal surname+maternal surname).
Okay, now we can start. :)
DH
DW
DD1
DS
DS
DD
DS
DD
DS
DD
Surnames: Spanish
-
DH
DW (DD1)
DS
DD
Surnames: Spanish
Feel free to expand the family!
Namebank:
Adrián, Alberto, Alejandro, Antonio, Bruno, Carlos, Darío, David, Diego, Eduardo, Enrique, Ernesto, Esteban, Fabián, Federico, Felipe, Fernando, Gerardo, Gonzalo, Guillermo, Héctor, Hugo, Ignacio, Ismael, Israel, Jacobo, Javier, Jesús, Joaquín, Jorge, José, Julio, Lorenzo, Lucas, Luis, Manuel, Marcos, Martín, Miguel, Néstor, Nicolás, Omar, Pablo, Pedro, Rafael, Ramón, Raúl, Ricardo, Roberto, Santiago, Sebastián, Sergio, Tomás, Vicente, Víctor.
Adela, Alba, Alicia, Amparo, Ana, Araceli, Azucena, Beatriz, Begoña, Belén, Berta, Candelaria, Carmen, Carolina, Claudia, Dafne, Dolores, Elena, Eloísa, Emilia, Esmeralda, Esperanza, Estrella, Fabiola, Flora, Genoveva, Gloria, Inés, Irene, Isabel, Josefa, Juana, Julia, Laura, Leonor, Leticia, Lidia, Lourdes, Luisa, Maite, Magdalena, Margarita, María, Mercedes, Natalia, Nieves, Nuria, Ofelia, Olga, Paloma, Patricia, Paulina, Pilar, Raquel, Rebeca, Rocío, Rosa, Sara, Serafina, Silvia, Sofía, Soledad, Tamara, Teresa, Trinidad, Valentina, Verónica, Victoria, Violeta, Yasmina, Yolanda, Zaira.
Feel free to use variants and diminutives!
“Dear optimist, pessimist, and realist – while you guys were busy arguing about the glass of wine, I drank it! Sincerely, the opportunist!”
-Lori Greiner