Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which an editor of the name is Tovaryshka_Anya.
gender
usage
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
A f & m Korean (Rare)
Variant of Ah.
Aahliyah f Obscure
Rare variant of Aaliyah.
Aane m Norwegian (Rare)
Form of Åne, a variant of either Ånund, Ånje 2, or Áni.
Abrakha m Russian
Diminutive of Abram 2.
Abuzər m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Abuzar.
Achante f African American
Maybe a variant of Ashanti.
Adeĺcja f Belarusian
Diminutive form of Adelaida.
Adushka m & f Russian
Russian diminutive of various given names including Adam, Adavkt, Adrian and other names starting with the syllable ad.
Adya m Russian
Diminutive of Adam.
Afon m Russian (Archaic), Ukrainian (Archaic)
Russian and Ukrainian form of Athos.
Ahapit m Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Agapitos.
Ahniya f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Agniya.
Aigel f Tatar
Aigel is the first name of Aigel Gaysina, the lead singer of the Russian band AIGEL. It is probably a form of Aygül.
Əkbər m Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Akbar.
Akhav m Biblical Russian, Biblical Ukrainian
Russian and Ukrainian form of Ahab.
Akhtem m Crimean Tatar
Alternate transcription of Ahtem.
Aktsiabryna f Soviet, Belarusian
Belarusian form of Oktyabrina.
Aleka m Russian
Alternate transcription of Alyoka 2.
Aleksasha m & f Russian
Diminutive of Aleksandr or Aleksandra.
Alekzander m Russian (Rare)
Rare alternate transcription of Aleksandr.
Alena f Russian
Variant transcription of Alyona.
Alesha m Russian
Variant transcription of Alyosha.
Alevtyna f Russian (Ukrainianized)
Ukrainianised form of Alevtina.
Aliaksiej m Belarusian
Belarusian Latin form of Aliaksei.
Aliaŭcina f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Alevtina.
Aliksey m Russian
Variant transcription of Aleksey.
Alisa f Hebrew
Variant of Aliza.
Alisä f Tatar
Tatar form of Alisa.
Allakh m Theology (Russified), Russian (Rare)
Russian form of Allah, rarely used as a given name by Muslim communities in Russia.
Almanch m Chuvash
Chuvash masculine name meaning "tax collector".
Alyakki m Chuvash
Chuvash form of Alexander.
Alyna f English (American, Modern), Russian (Ukrainianized, Rare)
Variant of Alina. As a Russian name, it is mostly used by Russian speaking Ukrainians who want to spell their name the same in Russian and Ukrainian Cyrillic.
Alyoka m Russian
Diminutive of Aleksey.
Alyokha m Russian
Diminutive of Aleksey.
Amous m Arabic
Arabic version of “Amos”, a minor prophet in the bible.... [more]
Ana f Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Bulgarian, English, South Slavic, Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Georgian, Polish
Diminutive of Anastasiya (and any other spelling of the name).
Ananiasz m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Ananiah.
Ancha f Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Anna or Anastasiya.
Andriyan m Russian
Variant of Adriyan. Andriyan Nikolayev was a Soviet cosmonaut.
Anek f Russian
Diminutive of Anastasiya or Anna.
Anenka f Russian
Diminutive of Anna or Anastasiya.
Anhel m & f Ukrainian (Rare)
Cognate of Angel.
Anichka f Russian
Diminutive of Anna.
Annusya f Ukrainian, Russian
Ukrainian diminutive of Anna also used in Russia. Also compare Annusha and Annushka.
Antin m Ukrainian
Ukrainian variant or folk/older form of Anton. A notable bearer was Antin Holovatyi, Zaporozhian Cossack otaman who was one of the creators and a commander of the Black Sea cossack army.
Antiokh m Russian (Rare)
Russian form of Antiochus.
Antoshka m Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Anton.
Anyuk f Chuvash
Chuvash form of Anna.
Anyukha f Russian
Diminutive of Anna or Anastasiya.
Anyusha f Russian
Another form of Annusha.
Anyuta f Russian
Russian diminutive of Anna.
Arianeth f Spanish (Latin American)
A woman destined to leave a mark on every heart she touches, with the strength of a brilliant mind and the promise of greatness that transforms everything in her path.
Artemiziya f Ukrainian (Rare)
Ukrainian form of Artemisia. Artemiziya Halytska (1912-1985) was an Ukrainian nationalist.
Artya m Russian
Diminutive of Artyom.
Artyukha m Russian
Diminutive of Artyom.
Asia f Russian, Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Ася (see Asya 1).
Astgh f Armenian (Rare)
Means "star" in Armenian.
Astrela f Soviet
From Greek αστερ (aster), meaning "star".
Avksom m Soviet
Москва (Moskva) spelled in reverse.
Avksoma f Soviet
Feminine form of Avksom.
Aygöl f Bashkir, Tatar
Alternate transcription of Aygol.
Aylana f Kalmyk, Tuvan, Buryat, Altai
The first part is likely derived from Turkic "ay" or "ай" in Cyrillic, meaning moon.
Aymira f Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Turkish (?), Tuvan (?)
The first part is likely derived from Turkic "ay" or "ай" in Cyrillic, meaning moon.
Aysen m Yakut
Derived from the name of the god Aiyy and Yakut сиэн (sien) meaning "grandson".
Aytunuk f Kyrgyz (Rare)
From Kyrgyz ай (ay), meaning "moon", and тунук (tunuk), meaning "transparent, clear".
Ayza f Arabic (Mashriqi), Kazakh, Tajik, Dagestani, Tatar, Bashkir, Tuvan, Altai
From Turkic ай (ay) meaning "moon" and Tajik зар (zar) meaning "gold," which derives from Persian زر (zar).
Azariy m Russian (Archaic), Ukrainian (Archaic)
Russian and Ukrainian form of Azariah.
Azim m Arabic, Uzbek, Tajik, Bengali, Persian, Malay, Azerbaijani, Bosnian
Means "magnificent, great, powerful" in Arabic. This can also be used an alternate transcription of Azerbaijani Əzim. In Islamic tradition العظيم (al-Azim) is one of the 99 names of Allah.
Bahylay m Yakut
Yakut form of Vasiliy.
Basel f Yiddish
Diminutive of Basia 2.
Batzion f Hebrew (Modern, Rare), Biblical Hebrew
Derived from בַּת־צִיּוֹן meaning "daughter of Zion". This name first appears as a personification of Jerusalem or the Judean nation (mainly in a negative context)... [more]
Baybal m Yakut
Yakut form of Pavel.
Bayraktar m Turkish (Rare)
Means "flagger" or "flag carrier" in Turkish. More common as a surname (see Bayraktar).
Boyan m Medieval Slavic
Means "storyteller, singer" in Old Slavic.
Budymyr m Ukrainian (Archaic)
From Ukrainian будує мир (buduye myr), which means "builds peace". The name means "one who spreads peace".
Chaja f Hebrew (Germanized), Hebrew (Polonized), Dutch (Modern, Rare)
A variant of Chaya used by German and Polish Jews. The name is also occasionally used by non-Jewish Netherlanders.
Chengjia m Chinese
From the Chinese 承 (chéng) meaning "bear, hold; inherit, receive; succeed" or 晟 (chéng) meaning "clear, bright; splendor, brightness" and 嘉 (jiā) meaning "fine, good, auspicious, excellent", 家 (jiā) meaning "house, home, family" or 佳 (jiā) meaning "good, auspicious, beautiful".
Cocoa f & m Pet, English (American, Rare)
Either a variant of Coco or from the English word cocoa for the cocoa bean. The word cocoa comes from the Spanish word cacao, which is derived from the Nahuatl word cacahuatl... [more]
Crato m Spanish, Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese form of Kraft. It also coincides with the name of a Portuguese village.
Crowley m English (American, Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Crowley 1 or Crowley 2.
Czarna f Yiddish (Polonized, Rare)
Polonised spelling of Charna.
Czeszka f Kashubian
Kashubian diminutive of Czesława.
Dana f Slavic Mythology
Dana is a rusalka in Slavic Mythology.
Danya m Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Danila 1 and Daniil in Russian and Danylo and Danyil in Ukrainian.
Danya f Ukrainian, Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Darya 1 or Daryna (Darina 2 in Russian).
Danylko m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Danylo.
Dariia f Ukrainian
Variant transliteration of Дарія (see Dariya).
Darka f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Dariya.
Denya m Russian
Diminutive of Denis.
Deva f Medieval Slavic, Medieval Russian, Serbian (Rare)
Means "maiden, girl, lass", derived from the Proto-Slavic děva, itself from the Proto-Indo-European dʰeh₁ "to suck, suckle".
Dobrynya m Medieval Russian, Medieval Ukrainian
Means "good virtues", from the old Slavic root *добръ (dobrŭ), meaning "good, kind" and Greek ἀρετή (áretí) meaning "virtue"... [more]
Dusya f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Yevdokiya.
Dzera f Digor Ossetian, Ossetian
Means "bird of prey" in Ossetian. It is also a diminutive of Dzerassa.
Dzhemil m Crimean Tatar
Crimean Tatar form of Cemil.
Dzhonrid m Soviet
From the name of the journalist John Reed. This was the birth name of Ivan Svanidze, the husband of one of Stalin's daughters.
Dzhuliya f English (Russified)
Form of Julia reflecting the English pronounciation, used by Russian speakers for Julias in the anglosphere.
Dzmitryy m Belarusian
Alternate transcription of Dzmitry.
Dzvinka f Ukrainian (Modern, Rare)
Derived form the Ukrainian дзвінок meaning "bell" or дзвінкий meaning "sonorous".
Elektrifikatsiya f Soviet
Means "electrification" in Russian. This name was used by communists in the Soviet Union who wanted to use non-traditional names for their children.
Ellajane f English (Rare)
A combination of Ella 1 and Jane.
Ennafa f Russian (Rare), History (Ecclesiastical, Russified)
Russian form of Ennatha. Ennafa Nikitina (1893-1975) was a Soviet botanist.
Erzsók f Hungarian
Diminutive of Erzsébet.
Fadha f Somali
Possibly from Arabic فِضَّة (fiḍḍa), meaning "silver" or فَضَاء (faḍāʔ), meaning "empty space".
Fətəli m Azerbaijani (Rare)
Means "victory of Ali", from Arabic فتح (fath) meaning "conquest, victory" and Əli.
Fayelene f Obscure
Variant of Faylene.
Fetch f Popular Culture
From the English word fetch. This name is used for a fictional character in the video game Infamous Second Son (2014).
Fly-fornication m English (Puritan)
Puritan name given after the first two words of 1 Corinthians 6:18 "Fly fornication", i.e. "avoid sexual immorality".
Frankham m Obscure
Transferred use of the surname Frankham.
Ganya m Russian
Russian diminutive of Gavriil.
Ganya f Ukrainian (Russified)
Russified form of Hanya 4.
Gavrila m Russian
A Russian folk form of Gavriil.
Gel f & m English (Rare)
Short form of Angelica and other names with the element.
Gelya f Russian
Diminutive of Angelina or Engelsina.
Gesha m Russian
Diminutive of Gennadiy.
Green m English, Medieval English
Transferred use of the surname Green.
Gŭlěbŭ m Medieval Russian
Old East Slavic form of Guðleifr.
Guzel f Tatar, Bosnian, Bashkir
Variant transcription of Guzal, Bosnian form of Güzel.
Hadizha f Dagestani
Dagestani form of Khadijah.
Hafiya f Ukrainian
Variant of Ahafiya.
Hafiya f Rusyn
Rusyn form of Sofia.
Halka f Ukrainian, Polish (Rare)
Diminutive of Halyna (Ukrainian) or Halina (Polish).
Hanno m Estonian, German, Finnish (Rare)
Short form of Johannes. In Finnish, Hannu is more commonly used.
Hanya f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Hanna 1.
Hayane f Armenian (Ukrainianized)
Ukrainianised form of Gayane. This was the name of the artist Hayane Atayan.
Həyat f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Hayat.
Hayina f Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian folk form of Gaiana.
Helia f Belarusian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Anhielina, or alternate transcription of Ukrainian Helya.
Helya f Ukrainian (Rare)
Diminutive of Anhelina, from Russian Gelya.
Hordiy m Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian form of Gordias. It also is very close to a word meaning "proud" in Ukrainian.
Hurşă m Chuvash
From Chuvash хурҫӑ (hurşă), meaning "steel". Alternative transcription of Khurşă.
Hyerin f Korean
Alternate transcription of Hye-rin.
İnarə f Azerbaijani
Derived from Arabic إِنَارَة (ʾināra) meaning "illumination, light".
Iordan m Romanian (Rare)
Romanian form of Jordan.
Ivasyk m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Ivan.
Ivista f Soviet (Rare)
Iosif Vissarionovich Stalin contracted, used by communists in the Soviet Union who wanted to use non-traditional names for their children.
Izaida f Soviet
Derived from a contraction of иди за Ильичом, детка (idi za Il'ichom, detka), meaning "follow behind (Vladimir) Ilyich (Lenin), child".
Izidorius m Lithuanian (Rare)
Lithuanian form of Isidorus.
Izmira f Albanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Izmir.
Jurko m Rusyn
Alternate transcription of Yurko.
J̌uuruy m Yakut
Yakut form of Yuriy.
Kalina f Guernésiais
Guérnésiais form of Caline 3
Kalyö m Komi
Komi form of Kallistrat.
Kamilka f Czech, Polish
Diminutive of Kamila.
Karmiya f Soviet
Variant of Krasarma.
Karney m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Korney.
Karya f Russian
Diminutive of Karina.
Katrya f Ukrainian
Diminutive and folk form of Kateryna. Katrya Hrynevycheva (1875-1947) was an Ukrainian writer and activist.
Katsukazu m Japanese
From 捷 (katsu) meaning "quick, fast, rapid, victory, conquest, success" or 家 (katsu) meaning "house, home, building, dwelling" combined with 紀 (kazu) meaning "narrative, chronical, account"... [more]
Katyrzyna f Rusyn
Rusyn form of Catherine. The name is rarely in use due to Rusyn assimilation with other Slavic cultures.
Khaya f Hebrew (Russified)
A form of Chaya used by Russian Jews.
Khaya f Dagestani
Dagestani form of Haya.
Khoma m Ukrainian (Rare)
Ukrainian form of Foma.
Khurşă m Chuvash
Means "steel" in Chuvash.
Kirya m Russian
Diminutive of Kir.
Klaske f West Frisian
Feminine version of the name Klaas, which is a short form of the name Nicolaas. Nicolaas consists of the Greek words nikè (victory) and laos (people) and means "Victor of the people"
Komsomol m Soviet
From the name of the communist youth organisation.
Kornelij m Russian (Rare)
Alternate transcription of Korneliy.
Korniy m Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian form of Korney.
Koz'l m Russian (Archaic)
Means "goat" in Russian.
Krarmiya f Soviet
Variant of Karmiya.
Krios m Greek Mythology
Variant of Kreios. It also means "ram" in Ancient Greek.
Krunomir m Croatian
Derived from the Slavic elements kruna "crown" and mirŭ "peace".
Ksanka f Ukrainian, Russian
Diminutive of Oksana.
Ksenofont m Polish, Russian, Ukrainian
Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian form of Xenophon.
Kumush f Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Turkmen (Russified)
Means "silver" in Uzbek, Kyrgyz, and Turkmen.
Küzhüget m Tuvan
Kuzhuget Shoygu was a Soviet politician.
Kvedaras m Lithuanian (Archaic)
Old Lithuanian form of Theodore.
Kvitka f Ukrainian (Rare)
Diminutive of Kvitoslava. It means "flower" in Ukrainian.
Kvitoslav m Ukrainian (Rare, Archaic)
Masculine form of Kvitoslava. This name is no longer in use.
Kvitoslava f Ukrainian
Ukrainian cognate of Kvetoslava.
Kwang-suk f Korean
Kim Kwang-suk was a North Korean singer in the Pochonbo Electronic Ensamble.
Kwiatomiła f Polish (Rare)
From Polish "Kwiato" (Kwiat) meaning "Flower" combined with slavic "Mila" meaning "Gracious, Dear". Masculine form is Kwiatomił.
Kwiatosława f Polish
Variant of Kwietosława and masculine form of Kwiatosław.
Kyzylkul f Kyrgyz (Rare)
Derived from Kyrgyz кызыл (kızıl) meaning "red" and күл (kül) meaning "ash".
Laika f Popular Culture, Pet
Means "barker" from the Russian лаять (layat') meaning "to bark". This was the name of a Soviet dog who became one of the first animals to go to space.
Lana f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Svitlana.
Lanya f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Melaniya.
Lema m & f Chechen
Means "lion" in Chechen.
Lenera f Soviet
Means "Lenin's era", dervived from "Ленинская эра (leninskaya era)". This name was used by communists in the Soviet Union who wanted to use non-traditional names for their children.
Łesia f Ukrainian (Polonized)
Polonised form of Lesya.
Lesja f Ukrainian (Expatriate), Ukrainian (Rare)
Form of Lesya in languages that use the letter j for a y sound. Also a rare alternate transcription.
Leszja f Ukrainian (Magyarized)
Magyarised form of Lesya.
Lisa f Russian
Short form of Larisa. It also means "fox" in Russian.
Lisovyk m Slavic Mythology, Ukrainian Mythology
Ukrainian form of Leshy. Directly translates to "forester".
Liubava f Medieval Slavic, Belarusian, Russian, Ukrainian
Belarusian usual form of Lyubava as well as a Russian and Ukrainian variant transcription of the name.
Looey m English
Diminutive of Louis.
Lukyana f Russian, Ukrainian
Feminine form of Lukyan.
Lutsko m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Lukyan.
Lyokha m Russian
Diminutive of Aleksey via Alyokha.
Lyubava f Medieval Slavic, Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian (Rare)
Variant of Lyubov. A known bearer of this name is the Ukrainian actress Lyubava Greshnova (b. 1988), whose birth name is Lyubov... [more]
Lyubomyr m Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Lyubomir.
Lyubomyra f Ukrainian
Feminine form of Lyubomyr.
Maniusia f Polish
Diminutive of Maria via Mania.
Mara f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Maria.
Marcysia f Polish
Diminutive of Marcela, Marcelina, and Marcjanna.
Marichko f Ukrainian
Variant of Marichka. This form would be used to address someone (by Ukrainian grammar rules).
Mariia f Finnish, Russian, Ukrainian
Variant spelling of Maria (Finnish) or alternate transcription of Mariya (Ukrainian and Russian).
Mariyko f Ukrainian (Rare)
Variant of Mariyka. This form would be used to address someone (by Ukrainian grammar rules).
Māriyyah f Arabic
Māriyyah al-Qibṭiyyah was a slave and wife of the prophet Muhammed.
Marusen'ko f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Mariya.
Mar'yana f Ukrainian
Alternate transcription of Maryana.
Maryya f Belarusian
Alternative transcription of Maryia.
Maryyka f Belarusian
Belarusian cognate of Mariyka.
Maya f Soviet, Russian (Rare)
From Russian май (may), meaning "May". It was used by communist parents wanting to reject traditional names as a reference to International Worker's Day on May 1st. The name is written as Maya (Мая) because it is feminine.
Maya f Chinese (Rare)
Combination of Ma and Ya.
Maya f Russian
Alternate transcription of Maiya 4.
Mečyslava f Belarusian
Feminine form of Mečyslaŭ.
Miká’e f Omaha-Ponca
Means “star” in Omaha-Ponca.
Mikhal m Ossetian, Rusyn
Ossetian and Rusyn form of Michael.
Mikhas' m Belarusian
Diminutive of Mikhail.
Mikhayl m Russian
Alternate transcription of Mikhail.
Mila f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Milena or Milana and in Russian also Lyudmila.
Minnaleena f Finnish (Rare)
Combination of Minna and Leena.
Minzhu f & m Chinese (Rare)
Means "democracy" in Chinese.
Miraal f Arabic, Persian
Alternative spelling of Miral meaning "deer" from Persian root marāl.
Mirgul f Kyrgyz
Derived from Arabic أميرة (ʾamīra) meaning "princess" combined with Kyrgyz гүл (gül) meaning "flower".
Mitsuka f Japanese
From 蜜 (mitsu) meaning "nectar, honey, molasses" combined with 鹿 (ka) meaning "deer, antelope". As a word, 蜜花 means "giant honey flower, Melianthus major". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Mokosha f Slavic Mythology
Ukrainian variant spelling of Mokosh.
Montell m & f English
Variant of Montel.
Mykhayla f Ukrainian
Variant transliteration of Михайла (see Mykhaila).
Myko m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Mykyta or Mykola.
Myla f Ukrainian
Ukrainian diminutive of Lyudmyla and variant of Mila.
Myra f Ukrainian (Rare)
Ukrainian cognate of Mira 2.
Nabi f Japanese
Nabi means "pot" in Okinawan language and was a common name for a woman in old Okinawa.... [more]
Nadeya f Belarusian (Archaic)
Older Belarusian form of Nadzeya, used in the 16th century.
Nadźka f Belarusian
A diminutive of Nadzeya.
Nadzyunya f Belarusian
A diminutive of Nadzeya.
Nadzyusha f Belarusian
A diminutive of Nadzeya.
Nadzyusya f Belarusian
Diminutive of Nadzeya.