armydad3_8's Personal Name List
Babe
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAYB
Rating: 23% based on 6 votes
From a nickname meaning
"baby", also a slang term meaning
"attractive person". As a feminine name, in some cases it is a
diminutive of
Barbara.
Bacchus
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Other Scripts: Βάκχος(Ancient Greek)
Pronounced: BAK-əs(English)
Rating: 55% based on 11 votes
From Greek
Βάκχος (Bakchos), derived from
ἰάχω (iacho) meaning
"to shout". This was another name of the Greek god
Dionysos, and it was also the name that the Romans commonly used for him.
Bachir
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Arabic (Maghrebi)
Other Scripts: بشير(Arabic)
Pronounced: ba-SHEER(Arabic) BA-SHEER(French)
Rating: 50% based on 5 votes
Alternate transcription of
Bashir chiefly used in Northern Africa.
Badiyah
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Arabic (Rare)
Rating: 53% based on 6 votes
Badley
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAD-lee
Personal remark: female spelling Badleigh
Rating: 14% based on 7 votes
Habitational name from Badley in Suffolk or Baddeley Green in Staffordshire, both named with the Old English personal name Bad(d)a + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.
Badrig
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Armenian (Rare, Archaic)
Rating: 38% based on 5 votes
Badriyyah
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Arabic
Other Scripts: بدرية(Arabic)
Pronounced: BAD-ree-ya
Rating: 45% based on 6 votes
Alternate transcription of Arabic بدرية (see
Badriya).
Bagley
Usage: English
Rating: 28% based on 5 votes
From various English place names, derived from the Old English given name
Bacga combined with
leah "woodland, clearing".
Bailey
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAY-lee
Rating: 42% based on 9 votes
From an English surname derived from Middle English
baili meaning
"bailiff", originally denoting one who was a bailiff.
Already an uncommon masculine name, it slowly grew in popularity for American girls beginning in 1978 after the start of the sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati, which featured a character with this name. Though it remained more common as a feminine name, it got a boost for boys in 1994 from another television character on the drama Party of Five. In the United Kingdom and Australia it has always been more popular for boys.
Báine
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Irish Mythology
Pronounced: bayn(Scottish Gaelic)
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
An Irish name meaning "whiteness, pallor". In Irish Mythology, Báine was a princess, daughter of Tuathal Techtmar, ancestor of the kings of Ireland. "Cailín na Gruaige Báine" and "Bruach na Carraige Báine" are the names of two traditional Irish songs.
-------------------------------------
Coming from a nick-name for a blonde person from the Gaelic word 'bàn' meaning white or fair. It may also be from Old and Middle English words meaning 'bone' and 'welcoming' respectively.
Baines
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (American)
Rating: 32% based on 5 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Baines 2. This was the middle name of President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Bajram
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Albanian
Rating: 12% based on 5 votes
Bakchos
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Greek Mythology
Other Scripts: Βακχος(Ancient Greek)
Pronounced: BAK-oss
Rating: 56% based on 5 votes
Balaram
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Odia, Bengali, Hindi, Nepali
Other Scripts: ବଳରାମ(Odia) বলরাম(Bengali) बलराम(Hindi, Nepali)
Rating: 46% based on 5 votes
Balarama
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Hinduism
Other Scripts: बलराम(Sanskrit)
Rating: 18% based on 4 votes
From Sanskrit
बल (bala) meaning "strength, might" combined with the name
Rama 1. According to the Hindu epic the
Mahabharata he was the elder brother of
Krishna. He was associated with agriculture and used a plough as a weapon.
Balbus
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Ancient Roman
Rating: 18% based on 5 votes
Roman
cognomen meaning
"stammerer" in Latin. This was a family name of the mother of Emperor Augustus, Atia Balba Caesonia.
Balderik
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Dutch (Archaic)
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Baldwin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Germanic [1]
Pronounced: BAWLD-win(English)
Rating: 30% based on 7 votes
Means
"bold friend", derived from the Old German elements
bald "bold, brave" and
wini "friend". In the Middle Ages this was a popular name in Flanders and among the
Normans, who brought it to Britain. It was borne by one of the leaders of the First Crusade, an 11th-century nobleman from Flanders. After the crusaders conquered Jerusalem, he was crowned as the king of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Balfour
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BAL-fər
Rating: 41% based on 7 votes
From a Scottish surname, originally from various place names, themselves derived from Gaelic baile "village" and pòr "pasture, crop, cropland".
Balsam
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Arabic (Rare)
Rating: 38% based on 4 votes
Baltazar
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
Rating: 53% based on 10 votes
Bancroft
Usage: English
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
From any of the various places of this name, derived from Old English bean meaning "bean" and croft meaning "small enclosed field".
Banes
Usage: Welsh
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Banks
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BANGKS
Rating: 12% based on 5 votes
From an English surname that that was given to a person who lived near a hillside or a bank of land.
Bannon
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (American, Modern, Rare)
Pronounced: BAHN-ahn(American English) BANN-uhn(American English) bah-NON(American English)
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Transferred from the surname
Bannon.
Barabas
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Theatre, English (Puritan)
Pronounced: bə-RAB-əs(English)
Rating: 26% based on 5 votes
Variant of
Barabbas. In literature, this is the name of the main character in Christopher Marlowe's play
The Jew of Malta (ca. 1590).
Barbara
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Italian, French, German, Polish, Hungarian, Slovene, Croatian, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Late Roman
Pronounced: BAHR-bə-rə(English) BAHR-brə(English) BAR-BA-RA(French) BAR-ba-ra(German) bar-BA-ra(Polish) BAWR-baw-raw(Hungarian) BAHR-ba-ra(Dutch)
Rating: 47% based on 7 votes
Derived from Greek
βάρβαρος (barbaros) meaning
"foreign, non-Greek". According to legend,
Saint Barbara was a young woman killed by her father Dioscorus, who was then killed by a bolt of lightning. She is the patron of architects, geologists, stonemasons and artillerymen. Because of her renown, the name came into general use in the Christian world in the Middle Ages. In England it became rare after the
Protestant Reformation, but it was revived in the 19th century.
Barlow
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAHR-lo
Rating: 43% based on 4 votes
Derived from a number of English place names that variously mean "barley hill", "barn hill", "boar clearing" or "barley clearing".
Barnabas
Gender: Masculine
Usage: German (Rare), English (Rare), Biblical, Biblical Latin, Biblical Greek [1]
Other Scripts: Βαρναβᾶς(Ancient Greek)
Pronounced: BAR-na-bas(German) BAHR-nə-bəs(English)
Rating: 39% based on 7 votes
Greek form of an Aramaic name. In Acts in the
New Testament the byname Barnabas was given to a man named
Joseph, a Jew from Cyprus who was a companion of
Paul on his missionary journeys. The original Aramaic form is unattested, but it may be from
בּר נביא (bar navi) meaning
"son of the prophet", though in
Acts 4:36 it is claimed that the name means
"son of encouragement".
As an English name, Barnabas came into occasional use after the 12th century. It is now rare, though the variant Barnaby is still moderately common in Britain.
Barnaby
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (British)
Pronounced: BAH-nə-bee(British English) BAHR-nə-bee(American English)
Rating: 45% based on 8 votes
English form of
Barnabas, originally a medieval vernacular form.
Barnett
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: Bar-nett
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Transferred use from the surname
Barnett.
Baron
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHR-ən, BAR-ən
Rating: 26% based on 5 votes
From the noble title, derived from Latin baro (genitive baronis) meaning "man, freeman", probably ultimately of Frankish origin.
Barrett
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAR-it, BEHR-it
Rating: 39% based on 8 votes
From a surname probably meaning "quarrelsome, deceptive" in Middle English, originally given to a quarrelsome person.
Barrick
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: bar-rick
Rating: 26% based on 5 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Barrick.
Barrie
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAR-ee, BEHR-ee
Rating: 18% based on 5 votes
Barrington
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare), Romani (Archaic), Jamaican Patois
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Barry
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: Irish, English
Pronounced: BAR-ee(English) BEHR-ee(English)
Rating: 13% based on 6 votes
Anglicized form of
Barra.
Bart
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Dutch
Pronounced: BAHRT
Rating: 24% based on 5 votes
Short form of
Bartholomew or
Bartholomeus. This name is borne by a mischievous cartoon boy on the television series
The Simpsons.
Barthélémy
Gender: Masculine
Usage: French
Pronounced: BAR-TEH-LEH-MEE
Rating: 40% based on 7 votes
Bartholomeus
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Dutch, Biblical Latin
Pronounced: bahr-to-lo-MEH-uys(Dutch)
Rating: 39% based on 7 votes
Bartholomew
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Biblical
Pronounced: bahr-THAHL-ə-myoo(English)
Rating: 38% based on 10 votes
English form of
Βαρθολομαῖος (Bartholomaios), which was the Greek form of an Aramaic name meaning
"son of Talmai". In the
New Testament Bartholomew is the byname of an apostle, possibly the same person as the apostle
Nathanael. According to tradition he was a missionary to India before returning westward to Armenia, where he was martyred by flaying. Due to the popularity of this
saint the name became common in England during the Middle Ages.
Bartle
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Puritan, Rare), Medieval English
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Bartlett
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BART-lett
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Bartlett.
Alternatively, one documentend usage was on the nephew of Charlemagne. He was christened by the name of Berthaelot, a diminutive of Bertha, the name of his mother and grandmother.
Bartley
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BAHRT-lee
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Bartley.
Barton
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Popular Culture
Rating: 18% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Barton. In popular culture, Barton Fink is the name of a playwright in the 1991 film "Barton Fink".
Barwin
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAR-win
Personal remark: female spelling Barwyn
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Bashiyra
Gender: Feminine
Usage: American (Modern, Rare)
Rating: 57% based on 7 votes
Bastian
Gender: Masculine
Usage: German
Pronounced: BAS-tee-an
Rating: 37% based on 6 votes
Bastienne
Gender: Feminine
Usage: French (Rare), French (Belgian, Rare), Flemish (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Rating: 30% based on 5 votes
Bates
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAYTS
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Battaglia
Usage: Italian
Pronounced: bat-TAL-lya
Rating: 48% based on 5 votes
From a nickname meaning "battle" in Italian.
Battista
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Italian
Pronounced: bat-TEE-sta
Rating: 41% based on 7 votes
Baudry
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval French, French (Belgian)
Rating: 38% based on 4 votes
Variant form of
Baldéric via the form
Baudric.
Baxter
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BAK-stər
Rating: 18% based on 5 votes
From an occupational surname that meant
"(female) baker", from Old English
bæcere and a feminine agent suffix.
Bayani
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Tagalog
Pronounced: ba-YA-nee
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
Means "hero" in Tagalog.
Bayard
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Carolingian Cycle
Rating: 39% based on 7 votes
Derived from Old French baiart meaning "bay coloured". In medieval French poetry Bayard was a bay horse owned by Renaud de Montauban and his brothers. The horse could magically adjust its size to carry multiple riders.
Baylin
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Modern, Rare)
Rating: 35% based on 4 votes
Baylor
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BAY-lər
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
From a surname, possibly an Americanized form of the German surname Beiler, derived from Middle High German beile meaning "measuring stick".
Bayne
Usage: English
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
Bazyli
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: Polish (Rare)
Pronounced: ba-ZI-lee
Rating: 43% based on 7 votes
Bearden
Usage: English
Pronounced: beer-den
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
English habitational name, a variant of
Barden, or from places in Devon and Cornwall called Beardon.
Beasley
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEEZ-lee
Rating: 17% based on 3 votes
From the name of a place in Lancashire, from Old English
beos "bent grass" and
leah "woodland, clearing".
Beathan
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Scottish Gaelic
Pronounced: BYA-han
Rating: 30% based on 5 votes
Derived from a
diminutive of Scottish Gaelic
beatha meaning
"life".
Beatrice
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Italian, English, Swedish, Romanian
Pronounced: beh-a-TREE-cheh(Italian) BEE-ə-tris(English) BEET-ris(English) BEH-ah-trees(Swedish) beh-ah-TREES(Swedish)
Rating: 76% based on 12 votes
Italian form of
Beatrix. Beatrice Portinari (1266-1290) was the woman who was loved by the Italian poet Dante Alighieri. She serves as Dante's guide through paradise in his epic poem the
Divine Comedy (1321). This is also the name of a character in Shakespeare's comedy
Much Ado About Nothing (1599), in which Beatrice and
Benedick are fooled into confessing their love for one another.
Beau
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English, Dutch (Modern)
Pronounced: BO
Rating: 53% based on 7 votes
Means
"beautiful, handsome" in French. It has been used as a given name since the middle of the 20th century. In Margaret Mitchell's novel
Gone with the Wind (1936) this is the name of Ashley and Melanie's son.
Although this is a grammatically masculine adjective in French, it is given to girls as well as boys in Britain and the Netherlands. In America it is more exclusively masculine. It is not commonly used as a name in France itself.
Beaudry
Usage: French (Quebec)
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Beaufort
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BOH-fert, BYOO-fert
Rating: 50% based on 5 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Beaufort.
Beauregard
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BO-rə-gahrd
Rating: 34% based on 7 votes
From a French surname meaning "beautiful outlook".
Beaux
Usage: French
Rating: 46% based on 5 votes
Becker
Usage: German
Pronounced: BEH-ku
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Derived from Middle High German becker meaning "baker".
Becker
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Rating: 8% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Becker.
Beckett
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BEHK-it
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
From an English surname that could be derived from various sources, including from Middle English bec meaning "beak" or bekke meaning "stream, brook".
Beckley
Usage: English
Pronounced: BECK-lee
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
This surname was taken from an English habitational name from any of the various places, in Kent, Oxfordshire, and Sussex, named Beckley whose name was derived from the Old English byname
Becca and the Old English
lēah "woodland clearing".
Alternatively, however, Beckley is also an Anglicized spelling of the South German and Swiss topographic names
Bächle and
Bächli which are diminutives of the German word
Bach "brook".
Bedros
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Armenian
Other Scripts: Պետրոս(Armenian)
Pronounced: behd-RAWS(Western Armenian)
Rating: 50% based on 7 votes
Western Armenian transcription of
Petros.
Beila
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Judeo-French, Yiddish
Pronounced: bie-lah, bay-lah
Rating: 62% based on 6 votes
Yiddish and Judeo-French equivalent of
Bella.
Belenus
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Gaulish Mythology
Rating: 63% based on 7 votes
Latinized form of Gaulish
Belenos or
Belinos, possibly from Celtic roots meaning either
"bright, brilliant" (from Indo-European *
bhel-) or
"strong" (from Indo-European *
bel-)
[1]. This was the name of a Gaulish god who was often equated with
Apollo. He is mostly known from Gallo-Roman inscriptions and was especially venerated in Aquileia in northern Italy.
Belicia
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Spanish (Rare), American (Hispanic, Rare), American (Rare)
Pronounced: bay-LEE-see-ah(Spanish)
Rating: 75% based on 6 votes
Belinda
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: bə-LIN-də
Rating: 66% based on 8 votes
The meaning of this name is not known for certain. The first element could be related to Italian
bella meaning "beautiful". The second element could be Old German
lind meaning "soft, flexible, tender" (and by extension "snake, serpent"). This name first arose in the 17th century, and was subsequently used by Alexander Pope in his poem
The Rape of the Lock (1712).
Belita
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Medieval Basque
Rating: 65% based on 6 votes
Medieval Basque name of uncertain origin and meaning. It was first recorded in Artaxoa (in the Navarre area) in 1330.
Bella
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHL-ə
Rating: 53% based on 7 votes
Short form of
Isabella and other names ending in
bella. It is also associated with the Italian word
bella meaning
"beautiful". It was used by the American author Stephenie Meyer for the main character in her popular
Twilight series of novels, first released 2005, later adapted into a series of movies beginning 2008.
Bellamy
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Rating: 52% based on 6 votes
From an English surname derived from Old French bel ami meaning "beautiful friend".
Belle
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHL
Rating: 66% based on 8 votes
Short form of
Isabella or names ending in
belle. It is also associated with the French word
belle meaning "beautiful". A famous bearer was Belle Starr (1848-1889), an outlaw of the American west, whose real given name was Maybelle.
Bellerose
Usage: French
Rating: 80% based on 5 votes
Means "beautiful rose" in French.
Belton
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BELL-tun
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Enclosure
one who came from, or lived near Belton.
Belvah
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Rating: 47% based on 6 votes
Benaiah
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Biblical
Other Scripts: בְּנָיָה(Ancient Hebrew)
Pronounced: bə-NIE-ə(English)
Rating: 18% based on 5 votes
Benaya
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Hebrew (Rare)
Rating: 55% based on 6 votes
Benedikte
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Danish, Norwegian
Rating: 20% based on 1 vote
Danish and Norwegian feminine form of
Benedict.
Benessa
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (American, Rare)
Pronounced: beh-NESS-uh(American English)
Rating: 60% based on 6 votes
Possibly an Anglicized form of
Benicia which was influenced by
Vanessa. It might also be a combination of
Ben 1 and
Vanessa or similar names ending in
-essa.
Benicio
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: beh-NEE-syo(Latin American Spanish) beh-NEE-thyo(European Spanish)
Rating: 43% based on 6 votes
From the surname of the 13th-century Italian
saint Philip Benitius (
Filippo Benizi in Italian;
Felipe Benicio in Spanish). A notable bearer of the given name is the Puerto Rican actor Benicio del Toro (1967-).
Benita
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Spanish
Pronounced: beh-NEE-ta
Rating: 43% based on 8 votes
Benito
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Spanish, Italian
Pronounced: beh-NEE-to
Rating: 27% based on 6 votes
Spanish contracted form of
Benedicto. This name was borne by Mexican president Benito Juárez (1806-1872). Benito Mussolini (1883-1945), the fascist dictator of Italy during World War II, was named after Juárez.
Benjamin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, French, German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Slovene, Croatian, Biblical
Other Scripts: בִּןְיָמִין(Ancient Hebrew)
Pronounced: BEHN-jə-min(English) BEHN-ZHA-MEHN(French) BEHN-ya-meen(German) BEHN-ya-min(Dutch)
Rating: 53% based on 8 votes
From the Hebrew name
בִּןְיָמִין (Binyamin) meaning
"son of the south" or
"son of the right hand", from the roots
בֵּן (ben) meaning "son" and
יָמִין (yamin) meaning "right hand, south". Benjamin in the
Old Testament was the twelfth and youngest son of
Jacob and the founder of one of the southern tribes of the Hebrews. He was originally named
בֶּן־אוֹנִי (Ben-ʾoni) meaning "son of my sorrow" by his mother
Rachel, who died shortly after childbirth, but it was later changed by his father (see
Genesis 35:18).
As an English name, Benjamin came into general use after the Protestant Reformation. A famous bearer was Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), an American statesman, inventor, scientist and philosopher.
Bennett
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHN-it
Rating: 50% based on 9 votes
Medieval form of
Benedict. This was the more common spelling in England until the 18th century. Modern use of the name is probably also influenced by the common surname
Bennett, itself a derivative of the medieval name.
Bennington
Usage: English
Rating: 52% based on 5 votes
From the English town name Benington, which can mean either "settlement belonging to Beonna's people" or "settlement by the River Beane".
Benoît
Gender: Masculine
Usage: French
Pronounced: BU-NWA
Rating: 35% based on 8 votes
Benoîte
Gender: Feminine
Usage: French
Pronounced: BU-NWAT
Rating: 31% based on 8 votes
Benson
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHN-sən
Rating: 17% based on 6 votes
From an English surname that originally meant
"son of Benedict".
Bentley
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BENT-lee
Personal remark: female spelling Bentleigh
Rating: 17% based on 7 votes
From a surname that was from a place name, itself derived from Old English
beonet "bent grass" and
leah "woodland, clearing". Various towns in England bear this name.
Benton
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHN-tən
Rating: 20% based on 5 votes
From a surname that was derived from a place name, composed of Old English
beonet "bent grass" and
tun "enclosure".
Bentsen
Usage: Danish
Personal remark: spelling Bentson
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
Berlin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Various
Pronounced: bər-LIN(English) behr-LEEN(German)
Rating: 50% based on 6 votes
From the name of the city in Germany, which is of uncertain meaning.
Berlyn
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (American, Modern, Rare)
Pronounced: bər-LIN(American English)
Rating: 30% based on 4 votes
Variant of
Berlin using the popular suffix
lyn.
Bernadette
Gender: Feminine
Usage: French, English, German, Dutch
Pronounced: BEHR-NA-DEHT(French) bər-nə-DEHT(English)
Rating: 33% based on 7 votes
French feminine form of
Bernard. Bernadette Soubirous (1844-1879) was a young woman from Lourdes in France who claimed to have seen visions of the Virgin
Mary. She was declared a
saint in 1933.
Bernard
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, French, Dutch, Polish, Croatian, Slovene, Czech, Germanic [1]
Pronounced: bər-NAHRD(American English) BU-nəd(British English) BEHR-NAR(French) BEHR-nahrt(Dutch) BEHR-nart(Polish, Croatian, Czech)
Rating: 49% based on 8 votes
Derived from the Old German element
bern "bear" combined with
hart "hard, firm, brave, hardy". The
Normans brought it to England, where it replaced the Old English
cognate Beornheard. This was the name of several
saints, including Saint Bernard of Menthon who built hospices in the Swiss Alps in the 10th century, and Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, a 12th-century theologian and Doctor of the Church. Other famous bearers include the Irish playwright and essayist George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) and the British World War II field marshal Bernard Montgomery (1887-1976).
Bernardyn
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Polish
Pronounced: behr-NAR-din
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Bernelle
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Rare)
Rating: 45% based on 6 votes
Either a diminutive of names beginning with the element
Bern-, such as
Bernadette and
Bernice, combined with the French feminine ending
-elle or a quasi-feminization of the surname
Bernell.
Bernett
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BER-nett
Personal remark: female spelling Bernette
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Bernett.
Berniece
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: bər-NEES
Rating: 32% based on 6 votes
Berrick
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BER-rick
Rating: 50% based on 5 votes
Transferred use of the surname
Berrick which was originally taken from various locational names in Kent, Shropshire, Oxfordshire, Yorkshire and Norfolk.
The name itself is derived from Old English
bere "barley" and
wic "outlying farm".
Bertha
Gender: Feminine
Usage: German, English, Germanic [1]
Pronounced: BEHR-ta(German) BUR-thə(American English) BU-thə(British English)
Rating: 23% based on 7 votes
Originally a short form of Germanic names beginning with the Old Frankish or Old Saxon element
berht, Old High German
beraht meaning
"bright" (Proto-Germanic *
berhtaz). This was the name of a few early
saints, including a 6th-century Frankish princess who married and eventually converted King
Æþelbeorht of Kent. It was also borne by the mother of
Charlemagne in the 8th century (also called
Bertrada), and it was popularized in England by the
Normans. It died out as an English name after the Middle Ages, but was revived in the 19th century.
This name also appears in southern Germanic legends (often spelled Perchta or Berchta) belonging to a goddess of animals and weaving.
Bertresa
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (American)
Pronounced: bur TREES uh(American English)
Rating: 38% based on 6 votes
Maybe derived from the surname
Bertrés.
Bertrude
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Frankish
Rating: 20% based on 4 votes
Variant of
Bertrud. This was the name of a 7th-century Frankish queen consort.
Bertuzzi
Usage: Italian
Pronounced: behr too ZEE
Rating: 23% based on 4 votes
variant of Bertucci.
Berwyn
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Rating: 25% based on 4 votes
Means
"white top" from the Welsh elements
barr "top, head" and
gwyn "white, blessed". This is the name of a mountain range in Wales.
Besian
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Albanian
Rating: 56% based on 5 votes
Besnik
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Albanian
Rating: 28% based on 4 votes
Means "faithful" in Albanian.
Bethany
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BETH-ə-nee
Rating: 64% based on 7 votes
From the name of a biblical town,
Βηθανία (Bethania) in Greek, which is probably of Aramaic or Hebrew origin, possibly meaning "house of affliction" or "house of figs". In the
New Testament the town of Bethany is the home of Lazarus and his sisters Mary and Martha. It has been in use as a rare given name in the English-speaking world since the 19th century, in honour of Mary of Bethany. In America it became moderately common after the 1950s.
Betty
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHT-ee
Rating: 27% based on 3 votes
Beulah
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Biblical, English
Other Scripts: בְּעוּלָה(Ancient Hebrew)
Pronounced: BYOO-lə(English)
Rating: 52% based on 5 votes
Beverley
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BEHV-ər-lee
Rating: 40% based on 5 votes
Bevin
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Irish (Rare)
Rating: 20% based on 3 votes
Bevis
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: BEE-vis
Rating: 23% based on 3 votes
From an English surname that is possibly derived from the name of the French town Beauvais.
Bianca
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Italian, Romanian
Pronounced: BYANG-ka
Rating: 47% based on 10 votes
Italian
cognate of
Blanche. Shakespeare had characters named Bianca in
The Taming of the Shrew (1593) and
Othello (1603).
Blake
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BLAYK
Rating: 41% based on 7 votes
From an English surname that was derived from Old English blæc "black" or blac "pale". A famous bearer of the surname was the poet and artist William Blake (1757-1827). It was originally a mainly masculine name but in 2007 actress Blake Lively (1987-) began starring in the television series Gossip Girl, after which time it increased in popularity for girls.
Blaze
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BLAYZ
Rating: 58% based on 5 votes
Modern variant of
Blaise influenced by the English word
blaze.
Braden
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRAY-dən
Rating: 12% based on 6 votes
From an Irish surname, an Anglicized form of
Ó Bradáin, which was in turn derived from the byname
Bradán. Like other similar-sounding names such as
Hayden and
Aidan, it and its variant
Brayden became popular in America at the end of the 20th century.
Bradley
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRAD-lee
Rating: 51% based on 8 votes
From an English surname that originally came from a place name meaning "broad clearing" in Old English. A famous bearer of the surname was the World War II American general Omar Bradley (1893-1981).
Brant
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRANT
Rating: 50% based on 6 votes
From an English surname that was derived from the Old Norse given name
Brandr. This is also the name for a variety of wild geese.
Breanna
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: bree-AN-ə, bree-AHN-ə
Rating: 24% based on 5 votes
Brendon
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BREHN-dən
Rating: 40% based on 8 votes
Brennan
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BREHN-ən
Rating: 35% based on 6 votes
From an Irish surname (Anglicized from Irish Gaelic
Ó Braonáin) that was derived from the byname
Braonán, itself from Irish
braon meaning "rain, moisture, drop" combined with a
diminutive suffix. As a given name, it has been used since the 1960s as an alternative to
Brendan or
Brandon, though it has not been as popular as them.
Brent
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRENT
Rating: 32% based on 6 votes
From an English surname, originally taken from various place names, perhaps derived from a Celtic word meaning "hill".
Bret
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BREHT
Rating: 42% based on 6 votes
Brian
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Irish, Old Irish [1]
Pronounced: BRIE-ən(English) BRYEEN(Irish)
Rating: 40% based on 7 votes
Meaning uncertain, possibly related to the old Celtic root *
brixs "hill, high" (Old Irish
brií) or the related *
brigā "might, power" (Old Irish
briíg). It was borne by the Irish king Brian Boru, who thwarted Viking attempts to conquer Ireland in the 11th century. He was slain in the Battle of Clontarf, though his forces were decisively victorious. This name was common in Ireland after his time, and it was introduced to northern England by Norse-Gael settlers. It was also used in Brittany, and was brought to England by Bretons in the wake of the
Norman Conquest. Though it eventually became rare in the English-speaking world, it was strongly revived in the 20th century, becoming a top-ten name for boys in most regions.
Brianna
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: bree-AN-ə, bree-AHN-ə
Rating: 32% based on 6 votes
Variant of
Briana. This is currently the more popular spelling of the name.
Britton
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRIT-ən
Rating: 47% based on 7 votes
Derived from a Middle English surname meaning
"a Briton" (a Celt of England) or
"a Breton" (an inhabitant of Brittany). Both ethnonyms are related to the place name
Britain.
Brock
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRAHK
Rating: 33% based on 7 votes
From an English surname that was derived from Old English brocc meaning "badger".
Brody
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BRO-dee
Rating: 12% based on 6 votes
From a Scottish surname that was originally derived from a place in Moray, Scotland. It probably means "ditch, mire" in Gaelic.
Brooklyn
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BRUWK-lən
Rating: 45% based on 8 votes
From the name of a borough of New York City, originally named after the Dutch town of
Breukelen, itself meaning either "broken land" (from Dutch
breuk) or "marsh land" (from Dutch
broek). It can also be viewed as a combination of
Brook and the popular name suffix
lyn. It is considered a feminine name in the United States, but is more common as a masculine name in the United Kingdom.
Brynn
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: BRIN
Rating: 59% based on 7 votes
Feminine variant of
Bryn. It was brought to limited public attention in 1978 when the actress Brynn Thayer (1949-) began appearing on the American soap opera
One Life to Live [1].
Byron
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: BIE-rən
Rating: 60% based on 7 votes
From a surname that was originally from a place name meaning "place of the cow sheds" in Old English. This was the surname of the romantic poet Lord Byron (1788-1824), the writer of Don Juan and many other works.
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