All Submitted Names

gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Samogost m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish sam "alone" (also compare Polish samotny "solitary, lone, lonely"), which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic samъ "alone"... [more]
Samojlo m Russian
Russian form of Samuel.
Samomysł m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish sam "alone" (also compare Polish samotny "solitary, lone, lonely"), which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic samъ "alone"... [more]
Samon m Japanese
This name combines 左 (sa, sha, hidari) meaning "left", 沙 (sa, sha, suna, yonageru) meaning "sand" or 佐 (sa) meaning "assistant, help" with 門 (mon, kado, to) meaning "gate."... [more]
Samonas m History, History (Ecclesiastical)
Hellenized form of Shamuna, which is a name that is likely to be of Semitic origin (e.g. Arabic, Aramaic or Hebrew). Its meaning is as of yet uncertain.... [more]
Samora f English
Possibly a variant of Samara. It was given to 16 girls born in the United States in 2011.
Samorix m Gaulish
Derived from Gaulish samo- "calm; summer" and rīx "king".
Samos m Ancient Greek
This name was borne by a Macedonian lyric and epigrammatic poet of the late 3rd century BC.
Samoset m Algonquin (Anglicized)
Means "He who walks over much" in Algonquin. This was the name of an Abenaki chief. He was the first Native American to make contact with the Pilgrims at Plymouth, Massachusetts and introduced them to Tisquantum (Squanto).
Samosław m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish sam "alone" (also compare Polish samotny "solitary, lone, lonely"), which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic samъ "alone"... [more]
Samouil m Greek
Modern Greek form of Samouel (see Samuel).
Sampaguita f Filipino
From Tagalog sampagita meaning "jasmine flower", which may have been derived from the Tagalog phrase sumpa kita meaning "I promise you" or from Spanish champaquita, a diminutive of champaca meaning "champak flower".
Sampashree f Sanskrit, Hindi, Odia
Possibly derived from Marathi element sampa (संप) meaning "lightning, striking" and Sanskrit sri (श्री) meaning "beauty".
Sampat m Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, Kannada
From Sanskrit सम्पद् (sampad) meaning "success, wealth, prosperity".
Samphan m & f Thai
Means "related, connected" in Thai.
Samphas f & m Khmer
Means "perception, sensation, contact" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit स्पर्श (sparsha).
Samphel m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan བསམ་འཕེལ (bsam-phel) meaning "increasing, becoming, establishing one's desires or wishes", derived from བསམ (bsam) meaning "aspiration, wish, intent" and འཕེལ (phel) meaning "increase, grow, multiply".
Samphoas f & m Khmer
Alternate transcription of Khmer សម្ផស្ស (see Samphas).
Samphors f & m Khmer
Alternate transcription of Khmer សម្ផស្ស (see Samphas).
Samphos f & m Khmer
Alternate transcription of Khmer សម្ផស្ស (see Samphas).
Samphoss f & m Khmer
Means "perception, sensation, contact" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit स्पर्श (sparsha).
Samphy f & m Khmer
Means "hard-working" in Khmer.
Samprina f Greek
Greek form of Sabrina.
Sampsa m Finnish Mythology, Finnish
Finnish variant of Sampson 1. In Finnish mythology Sampsa Pellervoinen was a god of fertility, fields and crops.
Sampurno m Javanese
From Javanese sampurna meaning "complete, whole, perfect", ultimately from Sanskrit सम्पूर्ण (sampūrṇa).
Şamqız f Karachay-Balkar
From the Karachay-Balker шам (şam) meaning "holy, sacred", "native, dear" or "beautiful" and къыз (qız) meaning "girl".
Sámr m Old Norse
From Old Norse sámr "swarthy, blackish".
Samra f Sanskrit
* Samra / Saamra /Saamara सामरा- accompanied by immortals, accompanied by god. It is feminine of सामर. Here स (sa) means with + अमरा ( amaraa) means immortal... [more]
Samra f Mandaean
Possibly from the Mandaic meaning "keeping, possessing".
Samraj m Indian, Tamil
From Sanskrit सम्राज् (samrā́j) meaning "supreme ruler, universal king" (itself from the prefix सम्- (sam-) meaning "altogether" and‎ राज (rāja) meaning "king")... [more]
Samrajyi f Indian
Name - Samrajyi साम्राज्ञी ... [more]
Samran m & f Thai
Means "happy, joyful" in Thai.
Samrat m Indian, Bengali
Derived from Sanskrit सम्राट् (samrat) meaning "emperor, sovereign".
Samrath m Indian (Sikh)
Means powerful and capable. God is known to be 'Samrath'
Samrawit f Amharic
Means "she unifies" or "she is unity" in Amharic.
Samrend m Kurdish
Kurdish Masculine given name, taken from the name of a mountain in Iranian Kurdistan.
Samri m Biblical Latin, Biblical
Form of Shimri used in the Vulgate (Latin Bible) as well as at least one English Bible: the Douay-Rheims Bible (1582-1610).
Samric m English
Variant of Sameric.
Samrina f Arabic
Means "fruit".
Samroeng m & f Thai
Means "rejoice" or "festive, cheerful" in Thai.
Samrose m Pakistani
originates from arabic word
Samruai f & m Thai
Means "foppish, extravagant, dapper" in Thai.
Samruddhi f Hindi
Means "prosperity, progress, growth".
Şəms f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shams.
Samsagaz m Literature (Hispanicized)
Spanish form of Samwise in The Lord of the Rings, translating "wise" as sagaz.
Samsaon m Guernésiais
Guernésiais form of Samson.
Samsara f English (American, Modern, Rare)
From Pali संसार (saṃsāra) "cycle of existence, endless rebirth, wheel of dharma", a term in Buddhism and Jainism.... [more]
Šamsātūnn f Balochi
Derived from šams meaning "sun" and (h)ātūnn meaning "lady".
Şämsegöl f Tatar
From the Arabic شَمْس (šams) meaning "sun" and Persian ګُل (gul) meaning "flower, rose".
Şəmsi m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shamsi.
Šamši f Ancient Near Eastern, Ancient Semitic
Old Arabic name meaning "my sun". It was borne by a queen of the Qedar who reigned from 735 to 710 BCE. Her successor was queen Yatie.
Šämsiä f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمْسِيَّة (šamsiyya) meaning "parasol".
Šämsibanat f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمس (shams) meaning "sun" and Bashkir банат (banat) meaning "girl".
Šämsibikä f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمس (shams) meaning "sun" and feminine name element бикә (bikä).
Samsin Halmoni f Korean Mythology
The name of the triple goddess of childbirth and fate in Korean mythology. It is derived from the hanja 三 (sam) meaning "three", 神 (sin) meaning "god, goddess, spirit" and 할머니 (halmoni) meaning "grandmother", an honourific term for goddesses highlighting their wisdom.
Šämsinur f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمس (shams) meaning "sun" and نور (nur) meaning "light".
Şamşiyat f Karachay-Balkar
From Arabic شَمس (shams) meaning "sun".
Samsó m Catalan
Catalan form of Samson.
Samsodin m Filipino, Maranao, Maguindanao, Indonesian
Maranao, Maguindanao, and Indonesian form of Shams al-Din.
Sámson m Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Samson.
Samsón m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Samson.
Samsonas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Samson.
Samsoni m Georgian (Rare)
Form of Samson with the Georgian nominative suffix -ი (-i). It is only used in Georgian when the name is written stand-alone.
Sam-soon f Korean
Variant transcription of Sam-sun.
Sämssan m Sami (Skolt)
Skolt Sami form of Samson.
Samsu m Indonesian
Variant of Syamsu.
Samsuddin m Indonesian, Malay, Bengali
Indonesian, Malay and Bengali form of Shams ad-Din.
Samsudin m Indonesian, Malay
Indonesian and Malay variant of Shams ad-Din.
Sam-sun f Korean
From Sino-Korean 三 "three" and 顺 "obey, submit to, go along with". It is also translated as "third daughter".
Samsuri m Indonesian, Malay
Possibly related to Arabic شمس (shams) meaning "sun".
Samta f Hindi
Samta is a name originating from Hindi meaning ‘To be a competitor’.
Samtan m & f Tibetan, Ladakhi
Alternate transcription of Tibetan བསམ་གཏན (see Samten).
Samten m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan བསམ་གཏན (bsam-gtan) meaning "meditative concentration, stable attention, awareness", derived from བསམ (bsam) meaning "thought, thinking" and གཏན (gtan) meaning "constant, perpetual"... [more]
Samthann f Medieval Irish
Possibly from the Old Irish sam meaning "summer".
Sämu m German (Swiss)
Bernese German form of Samuel.
Samu m & f Japanese
From Japanese 佐 (sa) meaning "assistant, help", 作 (sa) meaning "make, production, prepare, build", 咲 (sa) meaning "blossom", 夏 (sa) meaning "summer", 彩 (sa) meaning "colour", 珊 (sa) meaning "coral, centimeter", 紗 (sa) meaning "gauze, gossamer", 沙 (sa) meaning "sand" or 瑳 (sa) meaning "polish, brilliant white luster of a gem, artful smile" combined with 夢 (mu) meaning "dream" or 武 (mu) meaning "military, martial"... [more]
Samu m Manipuri
Means "elephant" in Meitei.
Samual m English
Variant of Samuel.
Samudera m Indonesian, Malay
Indonesian form of Samudra.
Samudra m & f Indian, Hindi, Assamese, Indonesian, Sinhalese
Derived from Sanskrit समुद्र (samudra) meaning "sea, ocean". It is a unisex name in India and Sri Lanka while it is only masculine in Indonesia.
Samudravarman m Sanskrit, History
From Sanskrit समुद्र (samudra) "sea, ocean" and वर्मन् (varman) "armor, protection". This was the name of a ruler of Kamarupa from 374 to 398 AD.
Samudtar m & f Tocharian
Means "sea" in Tocharian.
Samúel m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Samuel.
Samùél m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Samuel.
Samuèl m Provençal
Provençal form of Samuel.
Samu'ela m Hawaiian, Biblical Hawaiian
Older Hawaiian form of Samuel. It appears in the Bible in Hawaiian.
Samuelette f English (Rare)
Extremely rare feminine form of Samuel, created by using the French diminutive suffix -ette.
Samuèli m Sardinian
Sardinian form of Samuel.
Samueli m Sicilian, Sardinian
Sicilian and Sardinian form of Samuele.
Samuelis m Dutch (Rare), Lithuanian (Rare)
From Latin Samuelis, which is the genitive of the third declension of Samuel, the biblical Latin form of the Hebrew name Shemu'el.... [more]
Samuellu m Corsican
Corsican form of Samuel.
Samuels m Latvian (Rare)
Latvian form of Samuel.
Samuelus m Literature
This was the name of one of the characters in The Cats of Ulthar by H. P. Lovecraft.
Samuila f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Samuil.
Samuilo m Serbian (Rare)
Serbian form of Samuel.
Samukelisiwe f African, Zulu
Means "we have received" in Zulu.
Samularia f Hebrew (Rare)
Means "sweet one forever" in Hebrew.
Samulina f Judeo-Anglo-Norman, Faroese
Judeo-Anglo-Norman feminine form of Samuel and Faroese form of Samuline.
Samuline f Norwegian (Rare)
Feminine form of Samuel.
Samunao m Manipuri
Means "white elephant" in Meitei.
Sámur m Faroese
Faroese modern form of Sámr.
Samura f English (American)
Meaning:Resilient woman.... [more]
Samuray m Azerbaijani
Means "sable moon" in Azerbaijani.
Samuru m Japanese
"strength" (samu-), "protection" (-mu), or "warrior" (-ru).
Samus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Samos. This was borne by a Macedonian lyric and epigrammatic poet of the late 3rd century BC.
Samus f Popular Culture
Possibly a variant of the name Samantha that's used in the future.... [more]
Samuu'eel m Somali
Somali form of Samuel.
Samuwil m Quechua
Quechua form of Samuel.
Samuyil m Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Samuel.
Samuyӑl m Chuvash
Chuvash form of Samuil.
Samweli m Swahili
Swahili form of Samuel.
Samwell m Literature, Popular Culture
Samwell Tarly is the name of a character from the Song of Ice and Fire books by GRR Martin and the TV show Game of Thrones based upon the former.
Samweri m Shona
The Shona version of the Biblical name Samuel.
Samyaza m Ancient Aramaic, Jewish Legend
This is the name of a fallen angel in the Book of Enoch, who is portrayed as the leader of a band of angels called the Watchers that lust after mortal women and become fallen angels.
Samye f English
Variant of Sammy.
Samyra f Arabic
companion in evening conversation
Samzun m Breton
Breton form of Samson. Sant Samzun (known as Saint Samson of Dol in English, born c. late 5th century) is counted among the seven founder saints of Brittany.
San m & f Dutch, Limburgish
Dutch and Limburgish short form of Sander and Sanne.
San f Japanese
This name is used as 三 (san, zou, mi, mi'.tsu, mi.tsu) meaning "three."... [more]
San m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 山 (san) meaning "mountain".
San m & f Korean
"mountain"
San m & f Burmese
Means "water spring" in Burmese.
San f & m Burmese
Means "model, standard, ideal" or "to enjoy, to take delight in" in Burmese.
San m & f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese ဆန်း (see Hsan).
Śana f Tocharian
Means "woman" in Tocharian.
Şana f Kurdish
Possibly from the Kurdish şan meaning "honeycomb".
Səna f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Sana.
Sana f Japanese
From Japanese 紗 (sa) meaning "gauze, thread" combined with 夏 (na) meaning "summer".
Sana m & f Manipuri
Means "gold" in Meitei, ultimately from the Bengali.
Sanabil f Arabic
Means "ears (of crop)" in Arabic.
Sanad m Arabic
Means "support, wall" in Arabic.
Şanae f Romanian, Kurdish (Modern)
Probably comes from Sana's popularity, In Romanian it is pronounced like Shanae.
Sanae f & m Japanese
From Japanese 早 (sa) meaning "early, fast", 小 (sa) meaning "little, small", 真 (sana) meaning "true, reality", 颯 (sa) meaning "sudden, quick, sound of the wind", 紗 (sa) meaning "gauze", 五 (sa) meaning "five", 佐 (sa) meaning "assistant, help", 左 (sa) meaning "left", 沙 (sa) or 砂 (sa) both meaning "sand", 彩 (sa) meaning "colour", 采 (sa) meaning "dice, form, appearance, take, gather, colouring", 冴 (sa) meaning "be clear, serene, cold, skillful", 咲 (sa) meaning "blossom", 作 (sa) meaning "make, production, prepare, build", 桜 (sa) meaning "cherry blossom", 皐 (sa) meaning "swamp, shore", 三 (sa) meaning "three" or 実 (sa) meaning "reality, truth", 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens", 奈 (na) meaning "what", 南 (na) meaning "south", 名 (na) meaning "name", 那 (na) meaning "what", 茄 (na) meaning "eggplant", 七 (na) meaning "seven" or 直 (na) meaning "straight" combined with 苗 (nae) meaning "seedling, sapling, shoot", 愛 (e) meaning "love, affection", 絵 (e) meaning "picture, drawing, painting, sketch", 慧 (e) meaning "wise", 得 (e) meaning "gain, get, find, earn, acquire, can, may, able to, profit, advantage, benefit", 枝 (e) meaning "bough, branch, twig, limb", 恵 (e) meaning "favor, blessing, grace, kindness", 江 (e) meaning "creek, inlet, bay" or 依 (e) meaning "reliant, depend on, consequently, therefore, due to"... [more]
Sanae f Arabic (Maghrebi)
A notable bearer of the name is the Morocan-German politician Sanae Abdi, member of the 20th German Bundestag.
Sanaé f French (Modern), Belgian
Comes from the popularity of the name Sana, can also come from the trend of Japanese first names therefore from Sanae.
Sanah f English, Arabic
Variant of Sana.
Sanaka f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (sa) meaning "blossom", 南 (na) meaning "south" combined with 花 (ka) meaning "flower". Other combinations of kanji characters are also possible.
Sanaka m Hinduism
Means "old, ancient" in Sanskrit. In Hindu mythology this is the name of one of the four Kumaras, a group of child sages who are the firstborn sons of the god Brahma.
Sanako f Japanese
From Japanese 佐 (sa) meaning "help", 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sanal m Kalmyk
Derived from Mongolian санал (sanal) meaning "thought, desire, aspiration".
Sanam f Indian, Persian, Arabic
It means lover, beloved,sweatheart
Sanama f Efik, Ibibio
Means "completely pure" in Efik and Ibibio.
Sanamacha m & f Manipuri
From the Meitei sana meaning "gold" and macha meaning "small, little".
Sanamgul f Uzbek
Derived from sanam meaning "beauty, beautiful woman", which is also the name of a classical Uyghur music genre, and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Sanamoy f Uzbek
Derived from sanam meaning "beauty, beautiful woman", which is also the name of a classical Uyghur music genre, and oy meaning "moon".
Sanan m Kalmyk
Possibly from Kalmyk санх (sankh) meaning "to think, to meditate".
Sanan m Thai
Means "loud, resounding, reverberating" in Thai.
Sananda f & m Hindi, Bengali, Hinduism
Derived from Sanskrit आनन्द (ananda) meaning "happiness, bliss". In Shaiva tradition, this name belongs to one of the four sages created by the god Brahma... [more]
Sanandana m Hinduism
Means "ever-joyful" from Sanskrit सन (sana) meaning "long-lasting, perpetual" and नन्दन (nandana) meaning "glad, joyful". In Hindu mythology this is the name of one of the four Kumaras, a group of child sages who are the firstborn sons of the god Brahma.
Şənər m Azerbaijani
Means "happy man" in Azerbaijani.
Sanari m Tamil
A name derived from Sri Lanka/ South India. Means Deceitful and/or Sweet
Sanasar m Armenian
Sanasar Սանասար is an ancient Armenian name, which means "sacred mountain" սանա սար in armenian. It is also main character in armenian epic poem Sanuntsi Davit. In Russian it was Tra slated later as "sviatagor" which bears the same meaning "sacred mountain".
San'at m Uzbek
Means "art, masterfulness, craft" in Uzbek.
Sanatan m Indian, Bengali, Odia
From Sanskrit सनातन (sanatana) meaning "eternal, perpetual, everlasting".
Sanatana m Hinduism
Means "eternal, everlasting" in Sanskrit. In Hindu mythology this is the name of one of the four Kumaras, a group of child sages who are the firstborn sons of the god Brahma.
San'atgul f Uzbek
Derived from san'at meaning "art, craft" and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Sanath m Hindi
Lord Brahma, Eternal, Accompanied by a protector
Sanathoi m & f Manipuri
Derived from the Meitei sana meaning "gold, precious" and thoi meaning "winning".
Sanatkumara m Hinduism
Means "ever-young" from Sanskrit सन (sana) meaning "long-lasting, perpetual" and कुमार (kumāra) meaning "boy, son, prince"... [more]
Sanatruk m Ancient Armenian, Armenian
Borrowed from an Old Iranian language. The name of an Armenian king in the 1st century AD.
Sanatsu f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (sa) meaning "blossom" combined with 夏 (natsu) meaning "summer". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sanaullah m Arabic
Means "praise of God", derived from Arabic sana "praise" combined with Allah "God".
Sənay f Azerbaijani
From the Azerbaijani sən meaning "you" and ay meaning "moon".
Sanay m Indian
"Ancient" "One That Will Last Forever"
Sanaya f Sanskrit, Indian, Hinduism, Hindi, Telugu, Tamil
MEANING - old, ancient, long lasting, linger. It is derived from Sanskrit word Sanay ( सनय )... [more]
Sanballat m Biblical
Meaning "strength."
Sanbi f Japanese (Modern, Rare)
From 賛美 or 讃美 (sanbi) meaning "praise, glorification."... [more]
Sanç m Provençal
Provençal form of Sanctius.
Sança f Provençal
Provençal form of Sancha. This was the native name of Sanchia of Provence (c. 1228-1261), third daughter of Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence and a daughter-in-law of John, King of England; she was described as being "of incomparable beauty".
Sanceline f Medieval French
Medieval French diminutive of Sancia.
Sanchai m Thai
From Thai สรรค์ (sǎn) meaning "to establish, to create, to produce" and ชัย (chai) meaning "victory". The spelling สัญชัย is also used as the Thai form of Sanjaya.
Sanche m Medieval French
French form of Sancho.
Sanchez m American (Rare)
Transferred use of surname Sanchez.
Sanchi f Indian
indian
Sanchir m & f Mongolian
Means "Saturn (planet)" or "Saturday" in Mongolian. Cognate to Shani 2.
Sanchitha f Tamil, Kannada
Southern Indian form of Sanchita.
Sancia f Medieval Spanish, Judeo-Catalan, Gascon
(Medieval) Spanish, Judeo-Catalan and Gascon form of Sanctia.
Sancie f Medieval Occitan, Gascon
Gallicized form of Sancia.
Sancja f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Sanctia.
Sancta f English (Rare), Medieval Italian, Medieval French
Derived from Latin sancta "consecrated, sacred; divine, holy; pious, just".
Sanctan m Manx (Archaic)
Saint Sanctan was a 6th-century Manx bishop who is said to have been a disciple of Saint Patrick, though this is chronologically impossible.
Sanctia f Late Roman
Feminine form of Sanctius.
Sanctinus m Late Roman
Diminutive of Sanctius, as is evidenced by the suffix -inus. This was the name of a French saint from the 4th century AD.
Sancus m Roman Mythology
Derived from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂k-, meaning "to sanctify". This was the name of the god of trust, honesty and oaths in Roman mythology.
Sanda f Latvian
Contracted form of Sandra.
Sanda m & f Malagasy
Means "value" in Malagasy.
Sandaara f Yakut
Derived from Yakut сандаар (sandaar) meaning "to shine".
Sandake f Old Persian (Hellenized)
Possibly a hellenized form of Old Persian Sandauka.
Sandalius m Medieval Spanish (Latinized)
The name of a 4th century martyr from Cordoba. The name is also recorded as Sandulf, a Germanic name formed from the name elements SAND "truth" and WOLF "wolf".
Sandalphon m Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend (Hellenized)
The name of an archangel. Some of the earliest sources on Sandalphon refer to him as the prophet Elijah transfigured and rose to angelic status, later sources refer to him as twin brother of Metatron.
Sandaman m Yakut
Possibly means "radiant" in Yakut.
Sandara f Korean (Rare)
Means "grow up brightly and healthily" in Korean. A famous bearer is South Korean singer Sandara Park (1984-). Her name comes from the childhood nickname of general Kim Yu-shin (595 – 673).
Sandara f Pashto
"Song."
Sandaramet f Armenian Mythology
The Armenian goddess of death, the underworld and hell, also associated with the land and the earth. Her name and part of her mythology is taken from the Zoroastrian divinity Spenta Armaiti.
Sandauka m & f Old Persian
From Old Persian sanda meaning "to appear" or "to accomplish" and the hypocoristic suffix -auka.
Sandebert m Germanic
Derived from Gothic sanths "true, real" combined with Old High German beraht "bright."
Sandër m Albanian
Truncated form of Aleksandër.
Sanderad m Germanic
Derived from Gothic sanths "true, real" combined with Old High German rât "counsel."
Sandercock m Medieval English
Diminutive of Sander, a short form of Alexander.
Sanderijn f Dutch
Dutch form of Sandrine.
Sanders m English (British, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Sanders.
Sanderson m English
Transferred use of the surname Sanderson.
Sandesh m Marathi, Hindi
From Sanskrit संदेश (sandesha) meaning "message, information" or "present, gift".
Sandeul m & f Korean (Modern)
From adverb 산들 (sandeul), referring to the coolness and gentleness of the wind.
Sandey m & f English
Variant of Sandy.
Sandhiya f Indian, Tamil, Kannada
Variant of Sandhya used in southern India.
Sandhurst m Trinidadian Creole (Rare), English (Rare)
From the name of multiple cities in England, Australia and South Africa.... [more]
Sandi f & m English
Variant of Sandy.
Sandija f Latvian
Feminine form of Sandis.
Sandipta f Hinduism
Origin- India... [more]
Sandis m Latvian
Short form of Aleksandrs, now used as a given name in its own right.
Sandisiwe f Xhosa
Means "increased" or "we have been added to" in Xhosa.
Sandler m English
Transferred use of the surname Sandler
Sando m Bulgarian
Diminutive of Alexander.
Sando m Dagbani, Kusaal
Means "stranger" or "traveler" in Dagbani and Kusaal.
Sandokan m Literature
Sandokan is titular character in some tales later collected in a book series started with the first book 'Le tigri di Mompracem' (1900) written by Emilio Salgari (1862-1911). The name is most likely inspired by Sandakan, a city in Malaysia which means "the place that was pawned" in Suluk language.
Sandokes m Old Persian (Hellenized)
Hellenized form of Old Persian Sandauka.
Sandolf m Germanic
Variant spelling of Sandulf.
Šandor m Croatian (Rare)
Croatian form of Sándor. A famous bearer was Croatian writer Ksaver Šandor Gjalski (1854-1935).
Sandor m Banat Swabian
Banatswabian borrowing of Sándor.
Sandor m Literature
The name of a character in George R.R. Martin's novels A Song of Ice and Fire. Presented without the accent commonly used in the Hungarian spelling, but likely derived from the same. Most likely a form of Alexander, meaning "defender of man."
Sandora f Basque (Rare)
Feminine form of Sanduru, derived from Basque saindu/santu "saint".... [more]
Sándorné f Hungarian
A feminine form of Sándor
Sandratra m & f Malagasy
Means "ascension" in Malagasy.
Sandraudiga f Germanic Mythology
Sandraudiga is a Germanic goddess, attested on a stone with a Latin inscription, found in North Brabant, the Netherlands. The origin and meaning of her name are debated: theories include a derivation form Germanic *sanþ "true, real" and Gothic audags "rich; fortunate" and Old English *sand "sand" and Gothic rauds "red".
Sandre m & f French (Rare), Provençal
Short form of Alexandre and Aleissandre for men and French form of Sandra for women.... [more]
Sandria f English (American, Rare)
Either an elaboration of Sandra or a variant of Xandria/Zandria
Sandriele f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Possibly an elaborated form of Sandra.
Sandrien f Dutch
Dutch form of Sandrine.
Sandrijn f Dutch
Dutch form of Sandrine.
Sandrilene f Literature
Likely an elaboration of Sandrine, used in Tamora Pierce's 'Circle of Magic' series.
Sandrin m Romanian
Short form of Alexandru.
Sandrino m Italian
Diminutive of Alessandro or Sandro.
Sandrino f Provençal
Provençal form of Sandrine.
Sandro m Spanish
Diminutive of Alejandro.
Sandrocottus m Sanskrit (Latinized)
Latinized form of Sandrokottos, itself a hellenized form of Sanskrit Chandragupta, as well as the German form.
Sandrokottos m Sanskrit (Hellenized)
Hellenized form of Sanskrit चन्द्रगुप्त (See Chandragupta).
Sandroula f Greek
Diminutive of Sandra.
Sandry f Literature, English
Short form of the name Sandrilene.
Sands m American
Transferred use of the surname Sands.
Sanduarri m Ancient Near Eastern
Means "Šanta will help". Name borne by a king of the kingdoms of Kundu (which has been tentatively linked with the city of Anzarbus), and Sissu (the location of which is uncertain but is likely in one of the southern provinces of Turkey).
Sandugas' f Mari
Derived from the Tatar сандугач (sandugach) meaning "nightingale".