This is a list of submitted names in which an editor of the name is
sekejap.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Tet m BurmeseMeans "ascend, rise, soar" or "advance, increase, improve" in Burmese.
Teuku m AcehneseFrom a hereditary title for Acehnese men of noble or aristocratic descent, typically placed before the given name.
Tha f & m ChinMeans "strength, energy" in Hakha Chin.
Tha m & f BurmeseMeans "clear, pleasant, peaceful" or "exceed, excel" in Burmese.
Thaik m & f BurmeseMeans "treasure trove, deposit" or "prophecy, oracle" in Burmese.
Thammanun m ThaiMeans "law, code, charter, constitution" in Thai.
Thang m ChinMeans "loud, echoing, famous" in Hakha Chin.
Thanyalak f ThaiFrom Thai ธัญ
(thanya) meaning "wealthy, fortunate, prosperous, good" and ลักษณ์
(lak) meaning "sign, mark, characteristic".
Thaqib m ArabicMeans "sharp, piercing" in Arabic, derived from the second part of the Quranic phrase النجم الثاقب
(an-najmu at-thaqibu) meaning "the piercing star".
Tharaphi f BurmeseFrom the name of a type of tree that bears fragrant white flowers (scientific name Calophyllum polyanthum), ultimately from Sanskrit सुरभि
(surabhi).
Tharini f ThaiDerived from Sanskrit धारिणी
(dhāriṇī) meaning "earth".
Thawdar f & m BurmeseMeans "moon" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit सुधांशु
(sudhansu).
Thawka m Burmese (Rare)From the name of a type of evergreen tree that bears vermillion flowers (scientific name Amherstia nobilis).
Thawng m & f ChinMeans "sound, noise" or "news" in Hakha Chin.
Thaye m & f TibetanFrom Tibetan མཐའ་ཡས
(mtha-yas) meaning "limitless, endless, infinite".
Theingi f BurmeseMeans "gold (of a superior grade)" in Burmese, ultimately of Dravidian origin.
Thian m & f ChinMeans "clear, clean" in Hakha Chin.
Thipphavanh f & m LaoFrom Lao ທິບພະ
(thippha) meaning "heaven, sky" and ວັນ
(vanh) meaning "sun, day".
Thit m & f BurmeseMeans "new" or "timber, wood" in Burmese.
Thluai f ChinMeans "to go about in grandeur" in Hakha Chin.
Thoetsak m ThaiFrom Thai เทิด
(thoet) meaning "glorify, uphold, esteem" and ศักดิ์
(sak) meaning "power".
Thongbai f & m ThaiMeans "gold leaf, gold spread into thin sheets" in Thai.
Thuận f & m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 順
(thuận) meaning "obey, submit".
Thukha m & f BurmeseMeans "happiness, pleasure, delight" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit सुख
(sukha).
Thupten m & f TibetanFrom 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".
Thura m BurmeseMeans "brave, gallant" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit शूर
(shura).
Thurein m BurmeseEither from Sanskrit सूर्य
(surya) meaning "sun" or from शूर
(shura) meaning "heroic, brave, strong, powerful" combined with the name of the Hindu god
Indra.
Thuta m & f BurmeseMeans "knowledge, learning" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit श्रुत
(shruta).
Thuzar f BurmeseMeans "angel, heavenly queen" in Burmese, of Sanskrit origin.
Tiar f BatakMeans "bright, clear" in Toba Batak.
Tigor m BatakMeans "straight, honest, just, fair" in Toba Batak.
Timun Mas f Indonesian MythologyMeans "golden cucumber" in Javanese, from
timun meaning "cucumber" and
emas meaning "gold". This is the name of a girl featured in Javanese folklore, so named because she was born from a golden cucumber seed.
Tin m & f BurmeseMeans "to survive, to remain" in Burmese.
Tint m & f BurmeseMeans "proper, befitting, comely, becoming" in Burmese.
Tio f & m BatakMeans "clear, transparent" in Batak.
Tissa m Buddhism, SinhalesePali form of Sanskrit तिष्य
(tiṣya) meaning "auspicious, fortunate". This is the name of the twentieth of the twenty-seven buddhas preceding
Siddhartha Gautama, as well as the name of a 3rd-century king of Sri Lanka.
Titi f IndonesianMeans "true, correct, precise, careful" in Indonesian.
Tobgay m Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan སྟོབས་རྒྱས
(stobs-rgyas) meaning "mighty, extensive power", derived from སྟོབས
(stobs) meaning "power, force, strength" and རྒྱས
(rgyas) meaning "extensive, broad, wide".
Toe m & f BurmeseMeans "advance, go forward, increase" or "soft, gentle" in Burmese.
Toga m BatakMeans "association, kinship, family ties" in Toba Batak.
Togap m BatakMeans "strong, sturdy" in Toba Batak.
Togar m BatakMeans "fit, strong, fresh, healthy" in Toba Batak.
Togi m & f BatakMeans "to invite, to lead, to guide" in Toba Batak.
Tongchen f ChineseFrom the Chinese
彤 (tóng) meaning "red, vermilion" and
琛 (chēn) meaning "treasure, valuables".
Trực m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 直
(trực) meaning "straight, direct, honest".
Trimo m JavaneseFrom Javanese
trima meaning "to accept, to receive".
Triono m JavaneseFrom Javanese
tri meaning "three" combined with either the masculine suffix
-na or the word
ana meaning "being, having, holding".
Trisno m JavaneseFrom Javanese
trisna meaning "love, affection", ultimately from Sanskrit तृष्णा
(tṛ́ṣṇā).
Trisula m IndonesianMeans "trident" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit त्रिशूल
(triśūla).
Tsheten m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan ཚེ་བརྟན
(tshe-brtan) meaning "stable life, tenacious life", derived from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and བརྟན
(brtan) meaning "stable, firm, steadfast".
Tshewang m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan ཚེ་དབང
(tshe-dbang) meaning "powerful life, power of a long life", from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and དབང
(dbang) "power".
Tumpak m BatakMeans "help, support, assistance, aid" in Toba Batak.
Tut m & f BurmeseAlternate transcription of Burmese ထွတ်/ထွဋ် (see
Htut).
Ubaid m Arabic, UrduAlternate transcription of Arabic عبيد (see
Ubayd), as well as the usual Urdu form.
Ubayd m ArabicMeans "little servant" in Arabic, a diminutive of عبد
(ʿabd) meaning "servant".
Ubayd Allah m ArabicMeans "little servant of
Allah" from Arabic عبيد
(ʿubayd) meaning "little servant" (a diminutive of عبد
(ʿabd) meaning "servant") combined with الله
(Allah).
Udi m JavaneseMeans "to exert oneself, to strive, to learn" in Javanese.
Ugyen m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom ཨོ་རྒྱན
(o-rgyan), the Tibetan name for the medieval Indian state of Oddiyana, which was significant due to its role in the development of Vajrayana Buddhism.
Ujjal m BengaliFrom Sanskrit उज्ज्वल
(ujjvala) meaning "luminous, splendid, blazing, burning".
Uk m ChinMeans "control, possess, rule" in Hakha Chin.
Uli f BatakMeans "good, nice, beautiful, pretty" in Toba Batak.
Umayma f ArabicMeans "little mother" in Arabic, from a diminutive of أم
(ʾumm) meaning "mother". This was the name of an aunt of the Prophet
Muhammad.
Umayr m ArabicMeans "populous, prosperous, flourishing" in Arabic, from the word عَمَرَ
('amara) meaning "to live long, to thrive". This was the name of a companion of the Prophet
Muhammad.
Umi f Indonesian, MalayMeans "mother" in Indonesian and Malay, ultimately from Arabic أم
('umm).
Upul m SinhaleseMeans "water lily, lotus" in Sinhala, ultimately from Sanskrit उत्पल
(utpala).
Utomo m JavaneseFrom Javanese
utama meaning "best, main, primary, principal", ultimately from Sanskrit उत्तम
(uttama).
Uways m ArabicMeans "little wolf" from a diminutive of Arabic أوس
(ʿaws) meaning "wolf, jackal, wild dog".
Uzayr m ArabicArabic form of
Ezra. This is the name of a figure mentioned in the Qur'an, frequently described as a Jewish prophet who was falsely believed to be the son of God... [
more]
Vamana m HinduismMeans "dwarfish, small, short-statured" in Sanskrit. This is the name of one of the avatars of the Hindu god
Vishnu, who appears as a dwarf man to recover the three worlds (earth, heaven and the netherworld) from the demon king Bali.
Van m & f ChinMeans "heaven, sky, firmament" or "fortune, luck, fate, destiny" in Hakha Chin.
Vardhamana m SanskritMeans "prospering, growing, increasing" in Sanskrit. This was the birth name of
Mahavira, the founder of Jainism.
Vikramjit m Indian (Sikh)From Sanskrit विक्रम
(vikrama) meaning "stride, pace, valour" and जिति
(jiti) meaning "victory, conquering".
Vilaykham f & m LaoFrom Lao ວິໄລ
(vilay) meaning "beautiful, handsome, fine" and ຄຳ
(kham) meaning "gold".
Vilaysouk m & f LaoFrom Lao ວິໄລ
(vilay) meaning "beautiful, handsome, fine" and ສຸກ
(souk) meaning "health, ease, happiness".
Vongvilay m & f LaoFrom Lao ວົງ
(vong) meaning "lineage, family" and ວິໄລ
(vilay) meaning "beautiful, handsome, fine".
Wage m JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé, the name of the fourth day of the five-day week (Pasaran) used in the traditional Javanese calendar.
Wagiman m JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the masculine suffix
-man.
Wagimin m JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the masculine suffix
-min.
Waginah f JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the feminine suffix
-nah.
Waginem f JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the feminine suffix
-nem.
Wagiyah f JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the feminine suffix
-yah.
Wagiyem f JavaneseFrom Javanese
Wagé referring to the fourth day of the Javanese five-day week combined with the feminine suffix
-yem.
Wah f BurmeseMeans "yellow" or "cotton" in Burmese.
Wah f KarenMeans "white" in S'gaw Karen.
Wahidin m IndonesianFrom Arabic وحيدين
(waḥīdīn), the plural of وحيد
(waḥīd) meaning "peerless, unique".
Wahono m JavaneseFrom Javanese
wahana meaning "vehicle, carriage" or "omen, meaning, interpretation", ultimately from Sanskrit वाहन
(vāhana).
Wahyo m JavaneseFrom Javanese
wahya meaning "to come out, to appear (as in a revelation)".
Wahyono m JavaneseFrom Javanese
wahya meaning "to come out, to appear (as in a revelation)" combined with either the masculine suffix
-na or the word
ana meaning "being, having, holding".
Wahyudin m IndonesianFrom Indonesian
wahyu meaning "revelation" combined with Arabic دين
(dīn) meaning "religion, faith".
Wai m & f BurmeseMeans "profuse, abound" in Burmese.
Waing f & m BurmeseMeans "to gather around, to surround" or "collectively, together" in Burmese.
Wajdi m ArabicMeans "passionate, affectionate" in Arabic, derived from the root وجد
(wajada) meaning "to love passionately, to adore".