Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the description contains the keywords prince or of or all or men.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Thossaphon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thossapol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thossapon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thossawat m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsawat.
Thotsaphol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thotsaphon m Thai
Means "tenfold strength" from Thai ทศ (thot) meaning "ten" and พล (phon) meaning "force, strength, power". This is a Thai epithet of the Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama).
Thotsapol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thotsapon m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thotsaphon.
Thoukydidis m Greek (Rare)
Modern Greek form of Thoukydides (see Thucydides).
Thoume m Guernésiais
Short form of Thoumas.
Thoumine f Guernésiais
Feminine form of Thoumas.
Thoumisi f Coptic
Probably a feminine form of Houmisi, using the article ⲧⲁ- (ta-).
Thoyuelembe m Medieval Baltic
Medieval Estonian variant of Tõivelemb.
Thoyyibah f Indonesian
Indonesian form of Thuwaybah
Thrall m Popular Culture
Derived from Old English þræl meaning "slave". This name is used by Blizzard Entertainment for a character in the video game series Warcraft. In the series, Thrall is an orc shaman who leads the Horde for a period of time.
Thranduil m Literature
King Thranduil is a fictional character in J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. He is a supporting character in The Hobbit, and is referenced in The Lord of the Rings. Means "harsh spring" in Sindarin Elvish.
Þrándur m Icelandic
Icelandic form of Þróndr (see Trond).
Thrasamund m Germanic, History
Derived from Old Norse thras "quarrel, battle" combined with Old High German mund "protection." Thrasamund was a 5th-century king of the Vandals and Alans.
Thrasaric m Germanic
Derived from Old Norse thras "quarrel, battle" combined with rîcja "powerful, strong, mighty." The second element is also closely related to Celtic rîg or rix and Gothic reiks, which all mean "king, ruler."
Thrasivoulos m Greek (Rare)
Variant transcription of Θρασύβουλος (see Thrasyvoulos).
Þrasmundr m Old Norse
Old Norse combination of þrasa "to snort, to talk big, to make a bold show" and mund "protection".
Thrassa f Greek Mythology
Means “Thracian", referring to someone from the region of Thrace. In mythology, Thrassa was a nymph, the daughter of Ares and the Naiad Tereine... [more]
Thrasyandros m Ancient Greek
Means "bold man", derived from Greek θρασύς (thrasus) or (thrasys) "bold" combined with Greek ανδρος (andros) "of a man".
Thrasyanor m Ancient Greek, Greek Mythology
Means "bold man", derived from the Greek adjective θρασύς (thrasys) meaning "bold" combined with the Greek noun ἀνήρ (aner) meaning "man".... [more]
Thrasybulus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Thrasyboulos. Known bearers of this name include Athenian general Thrasybulus (4th century BC) and the tyrant Thrasybulus of Syracuse (5th century BC).
Thrasydaeus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Thrasydaios. This name was borne by a Greek tyrant of Agrigentum, who lived in the 5th century BC.
Thrasymachus m Ancient Greek (Latinized)
Latinized form of Thrasymachos. This name was borne by an ancient Greek sophist from the 5th century BC.
Thrasyphon m Ancient Greek
Means "bold voice", derived from Greek θρασύς (thrasus) or (thrasys) "bold" combined with Greek φωνη (phone) "voice". This name was borne by an eponymous archon of Athens, who lived in the 3rd century BC.
Thrax m Ancient Greek (Latinized), Ancient Roman
Derived from Latin Thrax meaning "Thracian", which in turn was ultimately derived from Greek Thrakē, which came from the verb thrāssō "to trouble, to stir". This was the name of Maximinus Thrax (i.e. Maximinus the Thracian), the 27th Emperor of the Roman Empire.
Threnody f American (Rare)
From the English word meaning "song of lamentation", which is ultimately derived from the Greek elements θρῆνος (threnos) "lament, wail, dirge" (probably from a Proto-Indo-European imitative base meaning "to murmur, hum") and ᾠδή (oide) "ode".
Thresa f English
Variant of Theresa.
Thresia f Malayalam
Malayalam form of Theresa
Thresia f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Malayalam form of Theresa, borrowed from Portuguese Teresa. Used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Thresiamma f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Form of Theresa used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Thressa f English
The given name of the American biochemist Thressa Campbell Stadtman (1920–2016), notable for the discovery of selenocysteine.
Thressiamma f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Form of Theresa used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Thresyamma f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Form of Theresa used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Þrima f Old Norse, Norse Mythology
From Old Norse þrima meaning "fight". In Scandinavian mythology Þrima is the name of a Valkyrie.
Þriði m Norse Mythology
Means "third one". This is the name of a god and a by-name for Odin in Norse mythology.
Thriti f Old Persian (Latinized)
This name was borne by one of the daughters of Zarathushtra.
Throkil m Old Danish
Old Danish variant of Thorkil.
Thrór m Norse Mythology (Anglicized), Literature
Anglicized form of the Old Norse name Þrór, a name found in the Dvergatal "Catalogue of Dwarves" in the Völuspá, a part of the Poetic Edda. The meaning of the name is uncertain.... [more]
Þröstur m Icelandic
Icelandic younger form of Þrǫstr.
Þrúðgelmir m Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Derived from þrúðr ("strength") and galmr ("shouting one, roarer"). In Norse mythology this is the name of a Jotunn with six heads.
Thrymr m Norse Mythology (Anglicized), Astronomy
Anglicized form of Old Norse Þrymr (see Trym). Thrymr is the name of one of Saturn's moons.
Þrymur m Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Þrymr (see Trym).
Thư f Vietnamese
Means "a letter" in Vietnamese... [more]
Thubten m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཐུབ་བསྟན (see Thupten).
Thucam f Vietnamese (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the names Thu and Cam 1.
Þúfa f Old Norse, Icelandic
Old Norse variant of Tófa, the feminine form of Tófi. It coincides with Old Norse þúfa "mound, knoll" (the origin of both Swedish tuva "tussock, tuft of grass" and Danish tue "small hill").
Thufir m Literature, Popular Culture
Name of a character in the novel 'Dune' (1965) and its franchise.
Thuisko m German (Rare, Archaic)
Probably derived from the name of a Germanic earth god mentioned only once in Tacitus.
Þula f Icelandic
Feminine form of Þuli.
Thulasi f & m Indian, Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil
South Indian form of Tulasi.
Thulerus m Old Swedish
Latinized form of Tólir.
Þuli m Old Norse
Possibly a variant form of ÞulR, misreading of Tóli or a misreading of Tólir.
Thulie f Zulu
Diminutive of Nokuthula.
Thulilwempi m Ndebele
Means "the dust of war" in Ndebele.
Thumas m Arthurian Cycle
One of the four wise clerks Arthur charges to chronicle the deeds of his knights.
Thumelicus m Germanic (Latinized), History
As the only known bearer of this name was the only child of two Germanic parents (Cheruscan chieftain Arminius and his wife Thusnelda), this name is probably a latinized form of an obscure Germanic name... [more]
Thumper m Popular Culture
Thumper is a fictional rabbit character from Disney's animated films Bambi and Bambi II. He is known and named for his habit of thumping his left hind foot.
Thunder f & m English, English (American, Modern, Rare), Popular Culture
From the English word thunder meaning "a loud rumbling or crashing noise heard after a lightning flash due to the expansion of rapidly heated air’ from Old English thunor.
Thunwa m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thanwa.
Thunya f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ธัญญา (see Thanya).
Thunyarat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ธัญญารัตน์ (see Thanyarat).
Thupstan m & f Ladakhi
Ladakhi form of Thupten.
Thupten m & f Tibetan
From Tibetan ཐུབ་བསྟན (thub-bstan) meaning "teachings of the Buddha, Buddhist doctrine", derived from ཐུབ (thub) referring to the Buddha and བསྟན (bstan) meaning "instruction, teachings".
Þura f Icelandic
Icelandic variant of Þóra.
Thurain m Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese သူရိန် (see Thurein).
Thuraya f Arabic
Variant of Thurayya
Thure m Swedish
Variant of Ture.
Thurein m Burmese
Either from Sanskrit सूर्य (surya) meaning "sun" or from शूर (shura) meaning "heroic, brave, strong, powerful" combined with the name of the Hindu god Indra.
Þurfrið m Anglo-Saxon
Old English form of Old Norse Þórfreðr.
Þurgar m Anglo-Saxon, Old Danish
Old English form of Old Norse Þórgeirr.
Thurgood m English
A contraction of the Puritan name Thoroughgood. A famous bearer is Thurgood Marshall (Born: July 2, 1908, Died: January 24, 1993), an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.
Thurian m Breton (Gallicized)
Variant of Turio, the name of a Breton saint.
Thuribe m History (Ecclesiastical)
French form of Turibius (see Toribio) and variant of Turibe.
Thurisind m Germanic
The meaning and origin of the first element in this Germanic name is rather uncertain, and so there are various possibilities to the name's meaning. The most likely possibility is that the first element comes from Old High German turs (compare Old Norse Þurs) "giant." An other possibility is that the first element refers to the Thuringii, a Germanic tribe... [more]
Thurismund m Germanic
The meaning and origin of the first element in this Germanic name is rather uncertain, and so there are various possibilities to the name's meaning. The most likely possibility is that the first element comes from Old High German turs (compare Old Norse Þurs) "giant." An other possibility is that the first element refers to the Thuringii, a Germanic tribe... [more]
Thurismut m Germanic
The meaning and origin of the first element in this Germanic name is rather uncertain, and so there are various possibilities to the name's meaning. The most likely possibility is that the first element comes from Old High German turs (compare Old Norse Þurs) "giant." An other possibility is that the first element refers to the Thuringii, a Germanic tribe... [more]
Þuríður f Icelandic
Icelandic variant of Turid.
Thuriva f Medieval English
Variation of Þórgifu used in the Medieval English times.
Thurl m American
Possible transferred use of the surname Thurl.
Thurles m Romani
Transferred use of the surname Thurles.
Thurlow m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Thurlow.
Thurman m English
Transferred use of the surname Thurman.
Thursday m & f English (African), Afro-American (Slavery-era)
From the name of the day of the week, which ultimately derives from Old English þunresdæg meaning literally "Thor's day". A known bearer of this name was Thursday October Christian (1790-1831), the first son of the HMS Bounty mutineer Fletcher Christian and his Tahitian wife Mauatua, who was born on a Thursday in October.
Ðurðevka f Croatian, Serbian
Derived from Serbo-Croatian ђурђевак (đurđevak) meaning "lily of the valley" (compare Đurđica).
Thushari f Sinhalese
Strictly feminine form of Thushara.
Thusnelda f Old Norse (Latinized), Germanic, History, German (Rare)
From the name Tussinhilda, originally an Old Norse name of which the second element is derived from Old Norse hildr "battle". The etymology of the first element has two possibilities. The first is that it is derived from Old Norse Þurs "giant" (as in, a giant, not an adjective illustrating something big), which would mean that the entire name's meaning is roughly "battle with a giant"... [more]
Thuvia f Literature
Thuvia is the name of a princess from the fictional universe of Barsoom created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Thuwaybah f Arabic
Means "deserving of God's reward" in Arabic. This was the name of the wet nurse of the Muslim prophet Muhammad. She later became one of his early followers.
Thuya m Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese သူရ (see Thura).
Thuyain m Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese သူရိန် (see Thurein).
Thuyein m Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese သူရိန် (see Thurein).
Thùytiên f Vietnamese
Combonation of Thùy and Tiên.... [more]
Thủytiên f Vietnamese
Combonation of Thủy and Tiên... [more]
Thuza f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese သူဇာ (see Thuzar).
Thuzar f Burmese
Means "angel, heavenly queen" in Burmese, of Sanskrit origin.
Thy f Vietnamese
Variant of Thi.
Thya f Indonesian
Variant of Thia.
Thyagarajan m Sanskrit
king of sacrifice
Thyam m Thai (?)
Variant of Thiam.
Thyatira f American (Modern, Rare)
From the name of a city in Asia Minor mentioned in Revelation in the New Testament. According Stephanus of Byzantium, the name of the city meant "daughter" from Greek θυγατήρ (thugatēr), though it may actually be from an older Lydian name... [more]
Thyestes m Greek Mythology, Theatre
In Greek mythology, Thyestes was the son of Pelops and Hippodamia, King of Olympia, and father of Pelopia and Aegisthus... [more]
Thyia f Greek Mythology
In Greek mythology, Thyia derived from the verb θύω "to sacrifice" was a female figure associated with cults of several major gods.
Thymbraeus m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of the Greek name Θυμβραίος (Thymbraios), of which the meaning is uncertain. It could have been derived from the Greek noun θύμβρα (thymbra) "savory", which refers to a herb now known as Satureja thymbra... [more]
Thymian f Literature
Derived from German Thymian "thyme". It was used by German author Margarete Böhme (1867-1939) in her novel Tagebuch einer Verlorenen (1905; "The Diary of a Lost Girl"). The book purportedly tells the true story of Thymian, a young woman forced by circumstance into a life of prostitution... [more]
Thymiane f French (Rare), Literature
Gallicized form of Thymian. This name was coined for the protagonist in the French translation - Journal d'une fille perdue - of Margarete Böhme's 1905 novel Tagebuch einer Verlorenen.
Thymios m Greek
Short form of Efthymios.
Thymochares m Ancient Greek
Derived from the Greek noun θυμός (thymos) meaning "soul, spirit" combined with either the Greek noun χαρά (chara) meaning "joy, delight, happiness" or the Greek noun χάρις (charis) meaning "grace, kindness" (see Chares).... [more]
Thyone f Greek Mythology
Means "inspire frenzy" in Greek. This was Semele's name after her apotheosis. As the goddess Thyone, she presided over the frenzy inspired by her son Dionysos... [more]
Þyri f Old Norse, Icelandic
Younger form of both Þýrví and Þyríðr.
Thyri f Old Danish
Younger form of Þyri.
Þyrill m Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
From the name of a mountain in Iceland, which means "whirl" from Old Norse þyrill (referring to wind gusts at the mountain peak). This is also the modern Icelandic word for "kingfisher (bird)".
Þyrnirós f Folklore
Means "burnet rose" (literally "thorn-rose") in Icelandic. This is used as the Icelandic name for the fairy tale character Sleeping Beauty, being the Icelandic translation of German Dornröschen, the title character of a Brothers Grimm fairy tale (known as Briar Rose in English).
Thyrsos m Ancient Greek
Derived from Greek θύρσος (thursos) or (thyrsos), which was the name for a type of staff or wand that was wreathed in ivy and vine-leaves and had a pine-cone at the top. It was often used as an instrument in the cult for Dionysos, the Greek god of wine, revelry, fertility and dance.
Thyrsus m Ancient Greek (Latinized), History (Ecclesiastical)
Latinized form of Thyrsos. This name was borne by a Christian martyr from the 3rd century AD, who was killed for his faith in Sozopolis (Apollonia), Phrygia during the persecution of Emperor Decius.
Thys m Medieval Dutch, Dutch (Rare), Afrikaans
Medieval Dutch and Afrikaans short form of Matthys. But in other words, you could also say that this name is the medieval Dutch and Afrikaans equivalent of Thijs.... [more]
Ti f Vietnamese
Variant of Thi.
Ti m Portuguese
Diminutive of Tiago.
Tía f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Tia.
Tia f New World Mythology
Tia is the goddess of peaceful death in the Haida mythology.
Tia f & m Ancient Egyptian
Etymology uncertain. This was the name of a daughter of Pharaoh Seti I and Queen Tuya, as well as the name of her husband.
Tià m Catalan
Short form of Sebastià.
Tiaa f Ancient Egyptian
From Egyptian tj-ꜥꜣ possibly meaning "the great", derived from a variant of tꜣ "the; she of" combined with‎ ꜥꜣ "big, great, important". Tiaa was an ancient Egyptian queen consort during the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt (1550-1292 BC)... [more]
Tiaamii f Obscure
Created by Peter Andre as one of the middle names for his daughter Princess. He came up with it by combining his mother's name Thea with the name of his then partner Katie Price's mother's name Amy.
Tiaan m Afrikaans
Short form of Christiaan.
Tiabeanie f Popular Culture
Tiabeanie Mariabeanie de la Rochambeau Grunkwitz, also known as Princess Bean, is the main character of the adult animated fantasy television series Disenchantment.
Tiadora f Sardinian
Sardinian form of Teodora.
Tiadoru m Sardinian
Sardinian form of Theodore.
Tiágó m Hungarian
Shortened version of Szantiágó.
Tiaguinho m Portuguese
Diminutive of Thiago and Tiago.
Tiah m English
Diminutive of Azariah used in the 18th century.
Tiah f English
The definite origin remains unknown but has links with names similar to Theia or Thea, however, considering it is such a short name it could be the pet form of many European names such as Cinthea or Lucretia.... [more]
Tiahn f English (Australian)
Variation of Tiana used infrequently but consistently in Australia.
Tiaki m Maori
Maori form of Jack, coinciding with the Maori word meaning "guard, keep">
Tialda f West Frisian
Variant of Thialda. A known bearer of this name is the Dutch singer Tialda van Slogteren (b. 1985), who was a member of the now-defunct German pop group Room2012.
Tiale f & m Korean
From Korean Hangul 티아레 (tiale) meaning "Tiare flower" (specifically referring to the species Gardenia taitensis), making it the Korean cognate of Tiare.
Tián m Galician
Short form of Sebastián and Bastián.
Tiana f Catalan
Short form of Sebastiana.
Tianah f English
Variant of Tiana.
Tianchai m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai เธียรชัย (see Thianchai).
Tianchang f Chinese
From the Chinese 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" or 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet, sweetness" and 嫦 (cháng), the name of a moon goddess or 唱 (chàng) meaning "sing".
Tianchun f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" or 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water" and 纯 (chún) meaning "pure, simple".
Tiandra f English (Rare)
Combination of Tiana and the popular suffix -dra.
Tiane f English
Short form of Christiane. Not as popular as the related name Tiana, but has roughly followed its popularity curve in much smaller numbers.
Tianjin f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" or 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 锦 (jǐn) meaning "bright and beautiful" or "brocade, embroidery, tapestry" or 瑾 (jǐn) meaning "brilliance of gems".
Tianjing f Chinese
From the Chinese 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water", 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful", 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial", or 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet, sweetness" and 婧 (jìng) meaning "modest", 晶 (jīng) meaning "crystal, clear, bright" or 静 (jìng) meaning "quiet, still, gentle".
Tianjue f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" and 珏 (jué) meaning "two pieces of jade joined together".
Tianka f Bulgarian (Rare)
Diminutive form of Tiana.
Tianlu f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" or 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 露 (lù) meaning "dew" or 璐 (lù), a kind of jade.
Tianmeng f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful", 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial", 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet, sweetness" or 添 (tiān) meaning "increase, add to" and 梦 (mèng) meaning "dream", 朦 (méng) meaning "condition or appearance of the moon" or 萌 (méng) meaning "bud, sprout".
Tianmin f Chinese
From Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "calm, quiet, tranquil, peaceful", 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet", 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven", or 添 (tiān) meaning "add, increase" combined with 敏 (mǐn) meaning "quick, clever, sharp" or 民 (mín) meaning "people, citizens"... [more]
Tianne f English (Rare)
Variant of Tiane and Tiana.
Tiannuo m Chinese
This name means 'promise of the sky' in Chinese. Deng Tiannuo is the Chinese madeup name of the famous journalist Tiziano Terzani (1938-2004) who lived in the Popular Republic of China with his family in the years 1980-84... [more]
Tianqing f Chinese
From the Chinese 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" or 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water" and 晴 (qíng) meaning "fine weather".
Tiansa f Chinese
From the Chinese 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 飒 (sà) meaning "sound of the wind, melancholy".
Tianshuang f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful", 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" or 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water" and 爽 (shuǎng) meaning "bright, clear, cheerful, happy, refreshing" or 霜 (shuāng) meaning "frost".
Tianwei m & f Chinese
From Chinese 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven" combined with 薇 (wēi) referring to osmunda regalis, a type of fern, as well as other character combinations that can form this name.
Tianwu m Chinese Mythology, Far Eastern Mythology
From a combination of the characters 天 (tian, meaning “heaven”) and 吴 (wu, referring to the Wu people of southeast China). This is the name of a deity found in the Shanhaijing (山海经), or Classic of Mountains and Seas... [more]
Tianxi f Chinese
From the Chinese 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful", 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet, sweetness" or 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water" and 熙 (xī) meaning "bright, splendid", 汐 (xī) meaning "night tides", 希 (xī) meaning "hope, hope for, rare" or 溪 (xī) meaning "mountain stream".
Tianxin f Chinese
From the Chinese 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water", 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful", 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" or 甜 (tián) meaning "sweet, sweetness" and 忻 (xīn) meaning "delightful, joyful", 馨 (xīn) meaning "fragrant, aromatic, distant fragrance", 昕 (xīn) meaning "dawn, early morning" or 心 (xīn) meaning "heart, mind, soul".
Tianxun f & m Chinese
From the Chinese 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water" and 洵 (xún) meaning "true, real".
Tianying f & m Chinese
From the Chinese 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 樱 (yīng) meaning "cherry, cherry blossom", 英 (yīng) meaning "hero, brave" or "flower, petal, leaf", 莹 (yíng) meaning "luster of gems, lustrous" or 滢 (yíng) meaning "clear, pure water, lucid".
Tianyue f Chinese
From the Chinese 湉 (tián) meaning "calmness of water", 恬 (tián) meaning "quiet, calm, peaceful" or 天 (tiān) meaning "sky, heaven, celestial" and 悦 (yuè) meaning "pleased, contented" or 月 (yuè) meaning "moon".
Tião m Portuguese
Diminutive of Sebastião.
Tiaraoluwa f Yoruba
Supposedly means "from the body of God" in Yoruba.
Tiaré f Spanish (Mexican)
Spanish (Mexican) form of Tiare.
Tiarella f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Tiara and Tiare. Also the name of a small woodland flower also known as foamflower.
Tiari f Indonesian, Javanese
Javanese variant of Tiara.
Tiarna f English (Australian)
Meaning unknown, possibly a variant of Tiana.
Tiarne f English (Australian)
Meaning uncertain. It may be a variant of Tiarna. It gained some popularity in Australia after rugby player Andrew Ettingshausen gave it to a daughter in the early 1990s.
Tiarra f English
Variant of Tiara
Tiaša f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Tatjana.
Tiasa f Greek Mythology
Tiasa was a Naiad nymph in Greek Mythology. She was a Laconian princess, daughter of King Eurotas.
Tiasia f African American (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Tyasia, It is influenced by the prefix ti-.
Tia-Sitra f Ancient Egyptian
Variant form of Sitre. This was the name given to one of the several daughters of pharaoh Ramesses II of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt (1292-1189 BC).
Tib f & m Medieval English
Short form of Theobalda/Theobald and Tabitha. (See also Tibbot).
Tib f Scots
Scots short form of Isabel.
Tiba f East Frisian
East Frisian short form of names starting with the Germanic name element þeudō "people" followed by a name element containing the letter b, e.g. burg "protection; protected place".
Tibå m Walloon
Walloon form of Thibault.
Tibád m Hungarian
Variant of Teobald.
Tibau m Walloon
Walloon form of Thibault.
Tibaud m Lengadocian, Provençal
Languedocian and Provençal form of Theobald.
Tibba f Anglo-Saxon
Meaning unknown. A notable bearer of this name was Saint Tibba of Mercia (7th century), a patron saint of falconers. She was a relative of Saints Kyneburga and Kyneswide of Mercia.
Tibbe m West Frisian
Variant form of Tibe.
Tibberiu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Tiberius.
Tibbi f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Tibby.
Tibbie f Scots
Diminutive of Tib.
Tibbles m & f Pet
Middle English form of the given name Theobald. According to Wikipedia, it is used in reference to the character of Tybalt or Tibert in the Reynard the Fox folk tale cycle.
Tibbot m & f Medieval English
Diminutive of Theobald and Theobalda.
Tibe m West Frisian
Frisian short form of names that have Gothic thiuda or Middle High German diet (both of which mean "people") for a first element, and of which the second element starts with a "b." The names Dietbald and Theudebert are good examples of that.
Tibeau m Medieval French, French (Rare), Dutch (Rare), Flemish (Rare)
Alternate spelling of Thibeau. With this particular spelling, this name can also be a medieval French diminutive of Tibère and other given names that start with Tib-, as -eau is a medieval French diminutive suffix.
Tiberce m Louisiana Creole (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Tiburce.
Tibèri m Provençal
Provençal form of Tiberius.
Tiberi m Catalan
Catalan form of Tiberius.
Tiberiana f Late Roman
Feminine form of Tiberianus.
Tiberianus m Late Roman
Roman cognomen which was derived from Tiberius.... [more]
Tiberias m English (Rare)
Likely a variant of Tiberius.
Tiberije m Bosnian, Croatian
Bosnian and Croatian form of Tiberius.
Tibērijs m Latvian
Latvian form of Tiberius.
Tiberijus m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Tiberius.
Tiberinus m Ancient Roman, Roman Mythology
Means "of the river Tiber" in Latin (also see Tiberius), as -inus is a Latin masculine adjectival suffix.... [more]
Tibério m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Tiberius.
Tiberio m Galician, Italian, Spanish
Galician, Italian and Spanish form of Tiberius.
Tibériusz m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Tiberius.
Tiberiy m Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Tiberius.
Tibèrja f Occitan
Occitan form of Tiberge.
Tibertus m Roman Mythology
Meaning unknown, possibly a variant of Tiberius. In Roman mythology, Tibertus was the god of the river Anio (present-day Aniene), a tributary of the Tiber.
Tibery m Russian
Variant transcription of Tiberiy.
Tibet m German (Modern, Rare)
Masculine form (back-formation) of Tibeta.
Tibeta f East Frisian (Rare, Archaic)
Elaboration of Tiba. It saw some usage between the 16th and 19th centuries.
Tibiabin f Guanche
From Guanche *tibəyt-abən, meaning "prayer". In Guanche folklore, this was the name of Tamonante's mother.
Tibiriçá m Brazilian
Tibiriçá means "watchman of the land" in Tupi. He was the leader of the Tupiniquim prior to the Portuguese colonization of Brazil.
Tibisay f South American
According to the Venezuelan historian Tulio Febres Cordero, this was the name of a legendary Chibcha (or Muisca) woman at the time of the Spanish conquest, known as the Enchantress of Mérida (Spanish: La Hechicera de Mérida)... [more]
Tibota f Medieval English
Feminine diminutive of Theobald.
Tibullus m Ancient Roman
Roman cognomen of uncertain origin. The only well-known bearer was Albius Tibullus, a Roman poet and elegist.
Tiburce m French (Rare), French (African)
French form of Tiburtius (see Tiburcio). A known bearer of this name is the French cartoonist Tiburce Oger (b. 1967).
Tiburcia f Spanish (Latin American, Rare)
Feminine form of Tiburcio. Notable bearers include two Argentinian revolutionaries, Tiburcia Haedo (1767-1839) and María Tiburcia Rodríguez (1778-1845).
Tiburcije m Croatian (Rare)
Croatian form of Tiburtius (see Tiburcio).
Tiburz m German (Archaic)
German form of Tiburtius (see Tiburcio).
Tiburzio m Italian (Rare)
Italian form of Tiburtius (see Tiburcio).... [more]
Tiça f Portuguese
Diminutive of Patrícia.
Ticasuk f Inupiat, Inuit
Meaning, "where the four winds gather their treasures from all parts of the world...the greatest which is knowledge."
Ticha f Portuguese
Diminutive of Patrícia.
Tícia f Hungarian
Hungarian short form of Letícia, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Ticia f Portuguese
Diminutive of Letícia.
Ticià m Catalan
Catalan form of Titian.
Ticián m Slovak (Rare), Hungarian
Slovak and Hungarian form of Titianus.
Ticiana f Portuguese
Portuguese form of Titiana.
Ticiano m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Tiziano.
Ticijan m Croatian
Croatian form of Tiziano.
Tico m Spanish
Diminutive of Alberto.
Ticó m Catalan
Catalan form of Tychon.
Ticón m Spanish
Spanish form of Tychon.
Ticone m Italian
Italian form of Tychon.
Ticwtkwa f Salishan
Of unknown meaning. Possibly of the Lilooet language, from the Salish language tree.
Tida m Japanese (Modern, Rare)
From 太陽 (tida), the word for "sun" in many Ryukyuan languages, cognate to Japanese 天道 (tendō), referring to the sun or the god of heaven and the earth.
Tida f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thida.
Tida f East Frisian
East Frisian short form of names starting with the Germanic name element þeudō "people".
Tidad f Spanish (Philippines)
Contracted form of Trinidad.
Tidarat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thidarat.
Tidde m West Frisian
Variant form of Tide.
Tide m West Frisian
Variant of Tiede.
Tideman m Dutch
Dutch form of Dietman.
Tideo m Italian, Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Tydeus.
Tideu m Catalan, Portuguese
Catalan and Portuguese form of Tydeus.
Tidey m Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Tydeus.
Tidhelm m Anglo-Saxon, History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from the Old English elements tīd "time" and helm "helmet, protection". This was the name of a 10th century Bishop of Hereford.
Tidhfridh f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Tíðfríðr.
Tidiane m Western African
From a French word used to refer to a follower of Tijaniyyah, a Sufi order that originated in Northern Africa.
Tidogolain m Arthurian Cycle
A dwarf who served Helie, the lady-in-waiting of Queen Esmeree the Blonde of Wales.... [more]
Tiebe m West Frisian
Variant of Tibe.
Tiébilé m Western African
Meaning as of yet unknown. A notable bearer of this name is the Malian politician Tiébilé Dramé (b. 1955).
Tiécoro m Western African
Meaning as of yet unknown. Notable bearers of this name include the Malian soccer player Tiécoro Keita (b. 1994) and the Malian soldier Tiécoro Bagayoko (1937-1983), who was once the director of Mali's national security service.