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.
Rumaysa f ArabicDerived from Arabic رمص
(ramaṣ) meaning "rheum, sleep in the eye", used as an Arabic name for the star Sirius. Al-Rumaysa bint Milhan, also known as Umm Sulaym, was a companion of the Prophet
Muhammad.
Rumpoko m JavaneseFrom Javanese
rumpaka meaning "to describe, to narrate (in song or poetry)".
Rungrot m ThaiMeans "flourishing, thriving, glorious, illustrious" in Thai.
Rushdi m ArabicMeans "reason, rationality" in Arabic, from the word رَشَدَ
(rashada) meaning "to be on the right path, to be rightly guided".
Sabaha f ArabicMeans "beauty, fairness, agreeableness, gracefulness" in Arabic.
Sabahat f Turkish, UrduDerived from Arabic صباحة
(ṣabāḥa) meaning "beauty, fairness, agreeableness, gracefulness".
Sabai f BurmeseMeans "jasmine" in Burmese, borrowed from Hindi चमेली
(chameli).
Sabar m IndonesianMeans "patient, forbearing" in Indonesian, ultimately from Arabic صبر
(ṣabr).
Sabir m Arabic, Urdu, AzerbaijaniMeans "patient, steadfast, enduring" in Arabic, from the root صابر
(ṣābara) meaning "to bear, to be patient, to endure".
Sabirin m IndonesianFrom Arabic صابرين
(ṣābirīn), the plural of صابر
(ṣābir) meaning "patient, steadfast, enduring".
Sabyrzhan m KazakhFrom Kazakh сабыр
(sabyr) meaning "patience, forbearance, endurance" (of Arabic origin) and жан
(zhan) meaning "soul" (of Persian origin).
Sa'd ad-Din m ArabicMeans "fortune of the religion" from Arabic سعد
(saʿd) meaning "fortune, good luck" combined with دين
(dīn) meaning "religion, faith".
Sadikin m IndonesianFrom Arabic صادقين
(ṣādiqīn), the plural of صادق
(ṣādiq) meaning "true, sincere, loyal".
Sadun m ArabicMeans "happy, joyful, fortunate" in Arabic, from the word سعد
(saʿd) meaning "fortune, good luck".
Şafak m & f TurkishMeans "dawn, daybreak" in Turkish, ultimately from Arabic شفق
(shafaq) meaning "twilight".
Safar m Arabic, Persian, Tajik, UzbekFrom Arabic سفر
(safar) meaning "journey, travel, voyage" or "campaign". It can also be derived from صفر
(ṣafar) referring to the second month of the Islamic calendar, derived from the word صفر
(ṣafr) meaning "empty, void" (so named because pagan Arabs looted houses empty during this month).
Safar ad-Din m Arabic (Rare)From Arabic صفر
(safar) referring to the second of the twelve months of the Islamic lunar calendar combined with دين
(dīn) meaning "religion, faith".
Saffet m & f TurkishDerived from Arabic صفوة
(ṣafwa) meaning "elite, best, prime, pure".
Safwat m & f ArabicMeans "best, finest" in Arabic, from the word صَفَا
(safa) meaning "pure, clear".
Sahala m BatakMeans "charisma, wisdom, power, authority" in Toba Batak.
Sahand m PersianFrom the name of a volcanic mountain (etymology unknown) in northwestern Iran.
Sahat m BatakMeans "to arrive, to reach" in Toba Batak.
Saidin m Malay, IndonesianFrom Arabic سعيدين
(saʿīdīn), the plural of سعيد
(saʿīd) meaning "happy, lucky".
Sajal m BengaliFrom Sanskrit सजल
(sajala) meaning "wet, humid, moist".
Sakhon m & f ThaiMeans "river, sea, ocean" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit सागर
(sāgara).
Salsabil f ArabicFrom the name of a water spring in paradise mentioned in verse 76:18 of the Quran. The term itself is of uncertain meaning, possibly of Akkadian origin.
Samal f KazakhMeans "breeze, wind" in Kazakh, ultimately from Arabic شمال
(shamāl) meaning "north, north wind".
Samaratungga m HistoryFrom Sanskrit समर
(samara) meaning "war, battle, conflict" or "coming together, meeting" combined with तुङ्ग
(tuṅga) meaning "lofty, tall, high". This was the name of a 9th-century ruler of Java who oversaw the construction of the Borobudur temple.
Sambath m & f KhmerMeans "fortune, wealth, prosperity" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit सम्पत्ति
(sampatti).
Sambodo m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sambada meaning "suitable, fitting, appropriate", ultimately from Sanskrit संबन्ध
(saṃbandha).
Samdup m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan བསམ་གྲུབ
(bsam-grub) meaning "fulfillment (of one's desires or wishes)".
Samphas f & m KhmerMeans "perception, sensation, contact" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit स्पर्श
(sparsha).
Samphel m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom 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".
Sampurno m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sampurna meaning "complete, whole, perfect", ultimately from Sanskrit सम्पूर्ण
(sampūrṇa).
Samten m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom 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]
San f & m BurmeseMeans "model, standard, ideal" or "to enjoy, to take delight in" in Burmese.
Sanaka m HinduismMeans "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.
Sanam f Persian, UrduMeans "image, idol" or "love, sweetheart" in Persian and Urdu, ultimately from Arabic صنم
(ṣanam).
Sanandana m HinduismMeans "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.
Sanatana m HinduismMeans "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.
Sanatkumara m HinduismMeans "ever-young" from Sanskrit सन
(sana) meaning "long-lasting, perpetual" and कुमार
(kumāra) meaning "boy, son, prince"... [
more]
Sang-Hyeok m KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 相
(sang) meaning "mutual, together", 商
(sang) meaning "commerce, business, trade" or 尚
(sang) meaning "still, yet" combined with 赫
(hyeok) meaning "bright, radiant" or 爀
(hyeok) meaning "red"... [
more]
Sang-Hyeon m & f KoreanFrom Sino-Korean 相
(sang) meaning "mutual, together" or 祥
(sang) meaning "good luck, good omen" combined with 炫
(hyeon) meaning "shine, glitter", 現
(hyeon) meaning "current, present", 賢
(hyeon) meaning "virtuous, worthy, able" or 鉉
(hyeon), which refers to a device used to lift a tripod cauldron... [
more]
Sangye m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan སངས་རྒྱས
(sangs-rgyas) referring to the
Buddha, derived from སངས
(sangs) meaning "purified, cleansed" and རྒྱས
(rgyas) meaning "extended, spread".
Santoso m JavaneseFrom Javanese
santosa meaning "firm, steady, strong", ultimately from Sanskrit संतोष
(saṃtoṣa).
Saor m & f BatakMeans "to mix, to mingle, to unite" in Toba Batak.
Sapargul f KyrgyzFrom Arabic سفر
(safar) meaning "journey, travel, voyage" combined with Kyrgyz гүл
(gül) meaning "flower".
Saptono m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sapta meaning "seven" combined with either the masculine suffix
-na or the word
ana meaning "being, having, holding".
Sarbaz m PashtoMeans "patriot, soldier" in Pashto, of Persian origin.
Sarfraz m UrduDerived from Persian سرفراز
(sarfarāz) meaning "proud, triumphant".
Sarith m KhmerPossibly derived from Sanskrit सृष्टि
(srishti) meaning "creation, creating".
Sarvanivaranavishkambhin m BuddhismMeans "impeder of all hindrances" from Sanskrit सर्व
(sarva) meaning "all, whole" combined with निवारण
(nivāraṇa) meaning "preventing, hindering, keeping off" and विष्कम्भिन्
(viṣkambhin) meaning "obstructing, impeding"... [
more]
Sarwo m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sarwa meaning "whole, all, every", ultimately from Sanskrit सर्व
(sarva).
Sarwono m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sarwa meaning "whole, all, every" combined with either the masculine suffix
-na or the word
ana meaning "being, having, holding".
Sasan m PersianModern form of Middle Persian
Sāsān of uncertain meaning, possibly from Old Iranian
*Sāsāna meaning "defeating enemy" or from the name of a regional Zoroastrian deity. This was the name of a 2nd-century prince, warrior and Zoroastrian priest who founded the Sasanian (or Sassanid) dynasty.
Sasmito m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sasmita meaning "facial expression, smile" or "sign, omen", ultimately from Sanskrit सस्मित
(sasmita).
Sasongko m JavaneseFrom Javanese
sasangka meaning "moon", ultimately from Sanskrit शशाङ्क
(śaśāṅka).
Sathian m & f ThaiMeans "secure, stable, firm" in Thai.
Satria m IndonesianMeans "knight, warrior, hero" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit क्षत्र
(kshatra) meaning "power, might, rule".
Satrio m JavaneseFrom Javanese
satriya meaning "nobleman, warrior, knight", ultimately from Sanskrit क्षत्रिय
(kṣatríya).
Saumya f & m Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, BengaliMeans "cool, moist, northern" or "pleasing, agreeable, gentle" in Sanskrit. This is a transcription of both the feminine form सौम्या and the masculine form सौम्य.
Saur m & f BatakMeans "to arrive, to reach, to become" in Toba Batak.
Saut m BatakMeans "to happen, to be fulfilled" in Toba Batak.
Sawbu f HistoryOf uncertain meaning. A famous bearer of that name was a Queen of the Hanthawaddy empire.
Say m & f KarenMeans "silver" in S'gaw Karen.
Sayomphu m ThaiMeans "self-existing, self-created" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit स्वयम्भू
(svayambhu).
Sayuti m Indonesian, MalayFrom the name of 15th-century Islamic scholar, jurist and mystic Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, whose name was derived from the city of Asyut in Egypt.
Sazali m MalayFrom the name of 13th-century Moroccan Sufi and scholar Abu al-Hasan al-Shadhili.