Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the description contains the keywords mouth or of or river.
gender
usage
keyword
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Trinley m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཕྲིན་ལས (see Thinley).
Trinnen f Medieval Dutch
A Medieval Dutch hypochoristic form of Catherine
Trinny f English (British, Modern, Rare)
This nickname is most well known because of British beauty entrepreneur, businesswoman, fashion and makeover expert, television presenter and author, Sarah-Jane "Trinny" Woodall. The 'Trinny' nickname came from a friend who likened her to a "St Trinian’s" character.... [more]
Tripa f Sanskrit
MEANING : satisfaction, pleased, Name of a plant ... [more]
Triphene f English (American, Rare)
Variant of Tryphena. This was borne by a short-lived daughter (1765-1769) of the early American midwife and diarist Martha Ballard.
Triphina f Breton, History
Allegedly from Trifin, a Welsh name derived from triw "exact, precise". This was the name of a 6th-century Breton saint, wife of the tyrant Conomor who killed their young son Tremorus.
Triputri f Indonesian
Combination of Tri and Putri.
Tris f & m English, Literature
Short form of Beatrice, Trisana, Tristan or Tristram.... [more]
Trisana f Literature
Name of one of the main characters in Tamora Pierce's Circle of Magic series.
Trisevgene f Theatre
Means "thrice noble" from Greek τρίς (tris) "thrice, three times" and εὐγενής (eugenes) "noble" (literally "well born"; compare Eugene)... [more]
Trisevgeni f Greek
Modern Greek form of Trisevgene.
Trishamae f Filipino
Combination of Trisha and Mae used primarily in the Philippines.
Trishelle f American (South)
Variant of Michelle, influenced by Trish.
Trishie f English
Variant of Trishy.
Trissy f English
Diminutive of Beatrice.
Tristana f Literature, Breton, Provençal
Feminine form of Tristan. This is the name of the main character in Benito Pérez Galdós' eponymous novel Tristana (1892).
Tristane f French (Rare)
Feminine form of Tristan.
Tristessa f Literature, Popular Culture
Used by the 20th-century writer Jack Kerouac for the title character in his short novel 'Tristessa' (1960), in which case it was intended to be an Anglicization of the Spanish word tristeza meaning "sadness" (from Latin tristis; compare Tristan)... [more]
Tristesse f English (Modern, Rare)
Apparently an adoption of the French word tristesse "sadness; melancholy".... [more]
Tristia f English (Modern, Rare)
Elaboration of Trista. It coincides with the neuter plural form of Latin tristis "sad".
Tristina f English (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Tristan using the popular suffix ina, probably influenced by the sound of Christina.
Tristine f English (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Tristan using the popular suffix ine, probably influenced by the sound of Christine. It is borne by American writer Tristine Rainer.
Tristouse f Arthurian Cycle, Literature
The posthumous daughter of King Briant of the Red Island and Mariole.... [more]
Tristy f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Tristan.
Trita f Hinduism, Bengali (Hindu, Rare)
Hindu cognate of Trito. Trita is a minor deity of the Rigveda.
Triteia f Greek Mythology
Daughter of the sea god Triton and mother of Melanippus in Greek mythology.
Tritnee f English (Modern, Rare)
Of uncertain origin.
Trivia f Roman Mythology
Derived from Latin trivium meaning "a place where three roads meet, a crossroads". In Roman mythology this was the name of a goddess of the night and crossroads, usually associated with witchcraft and sorcery as well as ghosts and childbirth... [more]
Trixi f Hungarian, German
Short form of Beatrix or Beatrice, parallel to english Trixie
Trixia f Filipino, English (Rare)
Elaborated form of Trixie.
Trixibelle f English
Possibly coined by television presenter Paula Yates and musician Bob Geldof for their daughter Fifi Trixibelle Geldof (1983-), from a combination of Trixie and Belle.
Trixle f German (Swiss)
Bernese German form of Beatrix.
Triyanti f Indonesian
Feminine form of Triyanto.
Trofima f Dutch (Archaic), Italian (Archaic), Polish (Archaic), Russian (Rare)
Dutch, Italian, Polish and Russian form of Trophima.
Trofimena f Italian (Rare)
This given name is best known for being the name of the 7th-century saint Trofimena, who was born and raised on the island of Sicily. During her lifetime, Sicily was a province of the Byzantine Empire, where Greek was the primary language... [more]
Troi m & f English (American)
Variant of Troy.
Troian m & f Portuguese (Brazilian, Modern, Rare), English (American, Modern)
Possibly a transferred use of the surname.
Troias f Ancient Greek
Possibly derived from Greek Τροία (Troia) meaning "Troy". This was the name of a 4th-century BC Greek princess, the daughter of King Aeacides of Epirus by his wife Phthia, and sister to King Pyrrhus and Princess Deidamia.
Troja f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Swedish form of Troy, the name of the ancient city in Turkey that appears in Homer's 'Iliad'.
Tronda f Norwegian
Female form of Trond or from the place name Trondheim. The father of the first girl named Tronda came from Trondheim.
Trophima f Late Greek, Late Roman
Feminine form of Trophimos (Late Greek) and Trophimus (Late Roman).... [more]
Trophimène f French (Archaic)
French form of Trophimena (see Trofimena).
Trot f & m Literature
From the English word ''trot'', given as a nickname to someone who walks with a diagonal gait. This is used as a nickname of two literary characters: the titular character from Charles Dickens' novel ''David Copperfield'' (1849) and Mayre "Trot" Griffiths from L. Frank Baum's books.
Trota f Medieval Italian
A name belonging to a famous 12th century physician, Trota of Solerno.
Trotula f Medieval Italian
Trota, also known as Trotula, of Salerno was an Italian physician from Salerno who lived in the early 12th century. She wrote or contributed to "De curis mulierum," a book on women's health and treatments... [more]
Troy f Dutch (Rare)
Variant of Trui.
Troya f English
Feminine form of Troy.
Troye m & f English (Rare)
Variant of Troy, sometimes used as a feminine form. A known bearer is South African-born Australian singer-songwriter and actor Troye Sivan (1995-).... [more]
Troyelle f Obscure
Feminine form of Troy.
Trpana f Macedonian
Likely a feminine form of Trpe.
Tru f & m English (American), Popular Culture
Variant of True as well as a short form of Gertrude and given names that start with Tru-, such as Trudy and Truman.... [more]
Tru f Dutch (Rare), Limburgish
Short form of Geertruida and Gertrudis and their many variants.
Truc m & f Vietnamese (Anglicized)
Variant of Trúc used outside of Vietnam.
Trúda f Slovak (Rare)
Slovak short form of Gertrúda, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Truda f Silesian, Slovene
Short form of Gertruda.
Trudee f English
Variant spelling of Trudy.
Trudeliese f German (Rare)
Combination of Trude and Liese.
Truden f Medieval Dutch
Possibly a diminutive of Gheertruud.
Trudence f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Trudy influenced by the name Prudence.
Trudene f English (Rare), Afrikaans
Elaborated form of Trudy.
Trudla f Sorbian
Sorbian short form of Gertrude.
Truella f Literature
Combination of the word "true" and the popular suffix -ella. This is the name of a character in L. Frank Baum's novel ''The Magical Monarch of Mo'' (1900).
Truffeni f Romani
Romani form of Tryphena.
Trugernanner f Indigenous Tasmanian
Meaning unknown. This was the name of Trugernanner (often referred to as Truganini), who was the last full-blooded Tasmanian Aboriginal, dying in 1876.
Trui f & m Dutch (Rare), Popular Culture
A short form of Gertruida or (more rarely) of Trudo.... [more]
Truike f Dutch (Rare), Limburgish
Diminutive of Trui, as it contains the Dutch and Limburgish diminutive suffix -ke.... [more]
Truitje f Dutch (Rare)
Diminutive of Trui, as it contains the Dutch diminutive suffix -tje.... [more]
Truitonne f Literature
Derived from the French word for trout, truite. This is the name of the ugly stepsister in the French fairy tale The Blue Bird. She is named so because her face has many spots like a trout. She is turned into a pig at the end - which is a pun due to the similarity of her name to the French word for sow, truie.
Truke f Dutch (Rare), Limburgish
Diminutive of Tru, as it contains the Dutch and Limburgian diminutive suffix -ke.
Trulsa f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Swedish feminine form of Truls.
Trutse f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Trudi.
Trutsi f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Trutse.
Truu f Limburgish (Rare)
Limburgian variant of Tru.
Truuj f Limburgish (Rare)
Limburgian cognate of Truy (medieval) and Trui (modern).
Truuke f Limburgish (Rare)
Diminutive of Truu, as it contains the Limburgian diminutive suffix -ke.
Truusje f Dutch
Diminutive of Gertrud.
Truuta f Estonian
Short form of Gertrud.
Truvy f Theatre
Used by the American writer Robert Harling for a character in his play Steel Magnolias (1987); the character, Truvy Jones, was played by Dolly Parton in the 1989 film adaptation. It is perhaps a variant of Trudy, itself a diminutive of Gertrude, or a transferred use of a surname.
Truy f Medieval Dutch
Short form of Geertruy, Geertruyt, Gertruyt and other variants that contain -truy-.
Truyken f Medieval Dutch, Medieval Flemish
Diminutive of Truy, as it contains the medieval Dutch diminutive suffix -ken.
Try m & f Indonesian
Variant of Tri.
Tryfena f Polish
Polish form of Tryphaina.
Tryfonia f Polish
Feminine form of Tryfon.
Tryna f Afrikaans
Afrikaans form of Trijna and thus a short form of Catharina and Catherina (compare Tryntje).
Tryntje f Medieval Dutch, Dutch (Rare)
Medieval Dutch form of Trijntje. This name has survived to modern times, but it is extremely rare in the Netherlands, especially when compared to its modern form Trijntje.
Tryphenia f English
Elaboration of Tryphena.
Tsadia f Asturian (Archaic)
Asturian form of Ladia.
Tsagaansar f Mongolian
Means "white moon" in Mongolian, from цагаан (tsagaan) meaning "white" and сар (sar) meaning "moon". This is the name of the Mongolian Lunar New Year, usually celebrated around the beginning of spring.
Tsampika f Greek
Possibly from Greek τσαμπίκα (tsampíka) or τσαμπέκα (tsampéka) referring to a musical instrument and type of ship, or from τσάμπα (tsámpa) meaning "fire, spark".
Tsanna f Coptic (Sahidic)
Tsanna is a variant of Susanna found in Coptic (including a stelae in the Brooklyn Museum).
Tsao m & f Chinese
The traditional form of the mandarin Cao. Tsao is commonly used in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Tsarina f Bulgarian (Rare), Indonesian (Rare)
Taken directly from the title for a female monarch of Bulgaria, Serbia, or Russia.
Tschena f Romansh
Romansh diminutive of Christina as well as the feminine form of Vincent.
Tseenaagai'bi'zhaa f Apache
Means "daughter of whitetail" in Apache.
Tséghádiʼnídíinii Atʼééd f New World Mythology, Navajo
Means "rock crystal girl" in Navajo, composed of tséghádiʼńdínii "rock crystal" and atʼééd "girl, maiden". This is the name of a character in the creation myth of Navajo mythology.
Tselha f & m Tibetan
Tselha is a unisex name of Tibetan origin. It's comprised of ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and ལྷ (lha) meaning "god/dess."
Tseliya f Russian
Russian and Ukrainian form of Caelia (see Celia).
Tsengeldüüren m & f Mongolian
Means "full of joy" in Mongolian, from цэнгэл (tsengel) meaning "celebration, merrymaking, happiness" and дүүрэн (düüren) meaning "full, complete".
Tsenka f Bulgarian
Bulgarian short form of the given name Tsvetana.
Tseren m & f Kalmyk, Mongolian
Kalmyk and Mongolian form of Tshering. It is solely used as a masculine name in Kalmykia while it is unisex in Mongolia.
Tsetan m & f Tibetan, Ladakhi
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚེ་བརྟན (see Tsheten).
Tseten m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚེ་བརྟན (see Tsheten).
Tsetsegzhargal f Mongolian
Means "flower of happiness" in Mongolian, from цэцэг (tsetseg) meaning "flower" and жаргал (jargal) meaning "happiness, blessing".
Tsetsilia f Georgian (Rare)
Georgian form of Cecilia. A known bearer of this name was the Georgian actress Tsetsilia Tsutsunava (1892-1956).
Tsetska f Bulgarian
Diminutive of Tsvetana.
Tsetsyliya f Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian form of Caecilia (see Cecilia).
Tsevel f & m Mongolian
Derived from a Tibetan name composed of ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and སྤེལ (spel) meaning "to increase, spread, develop, encourage".
Tsewang m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚེ་དབང (see Tshewang).
Tseyen f Mongolian
Mongolian form of Tseyang.
Tseyenpil f Mongolian
Probably a combination of Tseyen and a Mongolian form of the Tibetan element འཕེལ ('phel) "increase, growth, flourish".
Tsezarina f Bulgarian
Bulgarian feminine name of possible modern coinage and unknown etymology. It may be ultimately taken from the name Caesar.
Tsheltrim m & f Bhutanese
Bhutanese variant of Tshultrim.
Tshenoute f Coptic
Feminine form of Shenoute.
Tshewang m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan ཚེ་དབང (tshe-dbang) meaning "powerful life, power of a long life", from ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and དབང (dbang) "power".
Tshianda m & f Luba
Short form of Tshiandanda.
Tshiandanda m & f Luba
This name is given by Luba people when the newborn has at least four older siblings of the opposite gender.
Tshilidzi f & m Venda
Possibly means "Grace". A notable bearer is Tshilidzi Marwala, Deputy Vice Chancellor for Research and Internationalisation at the University of Johannesburg.
Tshomo f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan མཚོ་མོ (see Tsomo).
Tshui f Chinese (Teochew)
Teochew Chinese form of Cui.
Tshulthrim m & f Bhutanese, Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tshung f Chinese (Teochew)
Teochew Chinese form of Chun.
Tsillah f Hebrew
Rare variant spelling of Zillah.
Tsilya f Ukrainian, Jewish (Russified)
Russified form of Zillah or an Ukrainian diminutive of Ceciliya.
Tsion m & f Hebrew (Modern)
Variant of Tzion, used for both males and females.
Tsipora f Jewish (Rare)
Variant transcription of Tzipora.
Tsippy f Jewish
Variant of Tzippy. Tsippy Tamiri (1952 – 2017) was an Israeli mass spectrometrist, specialized in the analysis of explosives, drugs, and poisons.
Tsirapa f Asháninka
From the Ashaninka name for a species of large-leafed palm tree.
Tsiriry m & f Malagasy
Means "whistling teal" in Malagasy, a type of duck.
Tsirompisama f & m Asháninka
Etymology uncertain, allegedly the name of a type of plant and possibly from the Ashaninka tsirompi meaning "orchid".
Tsismara f Georgian (Rare)
Derived from Georgian ცისმარა (tsismara) or ცისმარე (tsismare) meaning "long, lifelong". Also compare the related Georgian adjective ცისამარა (tsisamara), which roughly means "single day, whole day".... [more]
Tsisnami f Georgian
Derived from Georgian ცის ნამი (tsis nami) meaning "dew of the sky". It consists of Georgian ცის (tsis) meaning "of the sky" and Georgian ნამი (nami) meaning "dew" (see Nami).
Tsiso f Georgian (Rare)
Short form of given names that contain Georgian ცის (tsis) meaning "of the sky", such as Tsisana and Tsisnami.
Tsitsana f Georgian (Rare)
Variant form of Tsisana.
Tsitseka f Greek (Rare, ?)
A form of Tzitzak or Çiçek. Empress Tzitzak was an 8th-century Khazar princess who converted to Christianity and was baptized Irene upon marrying the Byzantine emperor Constantine V.
Tsitsi f Georgian (Rare)
Meaning uncertain. It might perhaps be a short form of Tsitsino. Also compare Tsitsia.
Tsitsia f Georgian (Rare)
Variant form of Tsisia.
Tsitsino f Georgian
Derived from Georgian ციცინი (tsitsini) meaning "shine" (in or of the eyes).... [more]
Tsi-Zak-Gay f Indigenous American, Snohomish
Of uncertain etymology. Name borne by a Snohomish woman known for her skill in basket-weaving, and for introducing basket-weaving to the Snohomish people.
Tsokala f Georgian (Archaic)
Derived from Old Georgian ცხო (tskho) meaning "other, foreign" and Old Georgian ქალი (kali) meaning "woman, wife". The literal meaning of this name is thus "foreign woman", but its figurative meaning is the actual intended meaning... [more]
Tsolmontuyaa f Mongolian
From Mongolian цолмон (tsolmon) meaning "Venus, morning star" and уяа (tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)".
Tsorimpe f Asháninka
Etymology uncertain, perhaps from the Ashaninka name for a species of palm tree.
Tsovinar f Armenian, Armenian Mythology
Means "siren" from the Armenian word Ծովինար (tsovinar), ultimately linked to the word ծով (tsov) meaning "sea". Tsovinar was the Armenian goddess of rain, water and the sea.
Tsubasako f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 翼 (tsubasa) meaning "wing" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Tsubura f & m Japanese
This name can be used as 円 (en, mado, mado.ka, maru, maru.i, maro.yaka, tsubura) meaning "circle, round" or it can be combined with 良 (ryou, i.i, yo.i, ra) meaning "good." As a word, it (円ら) refers to something round and cute, especially the eyes.... [more]
Tsudzumi f Japanese
This name can be used as 鼓 (ko, tsudzumi) meaning "beat, drum, muster, rouse" or it can be combined with 美 (bi, mi, utsuku.shii) meaning "beautiful, beauty", 実 (shitsu, jitsu, makoto, makotoni, mi) meaning "reality, truth" and 海 (kai, umi, mi) meaning "ocean, sea."... [more]
Tsudzuri f Japanese (Rare)
From 綴り (tsudzuri) meaning "spelling; patching, binding."... [more]
Tsuf f & m Hebrew
Variant of Tzuf.
Tsugumi f Japanese
This name combines 亜 (a, tsu.gu) meaning "Asia, come after, rank next" or 次 (shi, ji, tsugi, tsu.gu) meaning "next, order, sequence" with 美 (bi, mi, utsuku.shii) meaning "beautiful, beauty", 実 (shitsu, jitsu, makoto, makotoni, mi) meaning "reality, truth", 弥 (bi, mi, amaneshi, iya, iyoiyo, tooi, hisashi, hisa.shii, ya, wata.ru) meaning "all the more, increasingly" or 海 (kai, umi, mi) meaning "ocean, sea."... [more]
Tsukane f & m Japanese (Rare)
This name is used as 束 (soku, taba, taba.neru, tsuka, tsuka.neru, tsukane) meaning "bundle."... [more]
Tsukie f Japanese
From Japanese 月 (tsuki, getsu) meaning "moon, month" and 恵 (e, megumi) meaning "favour, benefit" or 絵 (e) meaning "picture, painting". Other combinations of kanji are possible.
Tsukit f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Alternate transcription of Hebrew צוקית (see Tzukit).
Tsultim m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tsultrim m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tsume f & m Japanese (Rare), Popular Culture
Means "claw" in Japanese.... [more]
Tsun m & f Chinese (Cantonese)
Cantonese romanized of Jun.
Tsunade f Japanese Mythology, Popular Culture
This is the name of Jiraiya's wife from the Japanese folktale 'Jiraiya Gōketsu Monogatari'. The character from 'Naruto' is named after her. The word 綱手 (tsunade) means "mooring rope"; it comes from 綱 (tsuna) meaning "cable, rope, genus, class" and 手 (de) meaning "hand".
Tsura f Romani
Romani form of Zora.
Tsuruko f Japanese
From Japanese 絃 (tsuru) meaning "string, cord, samisen music", 津 (tsu) meaning "haven, port, harbor, ferry", 鶴 (tsuru) meaning "crane, stork" or 都 (tsu) meaning "metropolis, capital, all, everything", 留 (ru) meaning "detain, fasten, halt, stop" or 瑠 (ru) meaning "lapis lazuli" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child"... [more]
Tsurumi f Japanese
From Japanese 鶴 (tsuru) meaning "crane" or 蔓 (tsuru) meaning "vine" combined with 美 (mi) meaning "beauty", 実 (mi) meaning "berry, fruit, nut, real", or 見 (mi) meaning "to see". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Tsuruye f Japanese
Variant transcription of Tsurue.
Tsuruyo f Japanese
From Japanese 鶴 (tsuru) meaning "crane" or 蔓 (tsuru) meaning "vine" combined with 代 (yo) meaning "generation". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Tsuta f & m Japanese
From either 蔦 (tsuta), referring to the Boston ivy, or the stem of verb 伝う/傳う (tsutau) meaning "to go/walk along, to follow​," the former likely related to that verb. It can also be written with a combination of a tsu kanji, e.g. 津 meaning "harbour, haven," and a ta kanji, e.g. 多 meaning "many."... [more]
Tsutsuji f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 躑躅 meaning "azalea", the name of the flower.
Tsutsumi f Japanese
Meaning "To Wrap" or "Wrapping". It is more of the sound than the meaning itself that makes it special.
Tsuyako f Japanese
This name combines 沢 (tsuya) meaning "swamp, marsh, brilliance, grace", 彩 (tsuya) meaning "colour" or 艶 (tsuya) meaning "gloss, luster, beautiful, charming" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child, the rat, first sign of the Chinese zodiac"... [more]
Tsuzuri f Japanese (Rare)
Variant transcription of Tsudzuri.
Tsvetle f Yiddish
Slavicised form of Bluma, compare Russian цвето́к (cvetók) "flower" and Bulgarian Tsvetan.
Tsvetomira f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Tsvetomir.
Tsviata f Bulgarian
Derived from Bulgarian цвят (cvjat) "colour (usually vivid); (of a plant) blossom, flower; (figurative) elite, the best of the bunch".
Tsybik m & f Buryat (Russified)
Russified form of the Buryat name Цэбэг (Tsebeg) or Сэбэг (Sebeg) meaning "eternal, immortal, undying", ultimately from Tibetan ཚེ་དཔག (tshe-dpag).
Tua f Swedish, Finland Swedish, Danish (Rare)
Origin uncertain, possibly a variant of Tova 2, a feminine form of Tue or a short form of Perpetua... [more]
Tuá f Sami
Sami form of Tua.
Tuala f Breton
Feminine form of Tual.
Tuala f Irish (Anglicized)
Semi-anglicized form of Tuathla (ultimately Tuathflaith)
Tualen f Breton
Feminine form of Tual.
Tuana f Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare)
Possibly a combination of tu ("you") and Ana.
Tuaruna f Greenlandic
Younger form of Tuarana.
Tuathlaith f Irish
Means "princess of the people" from Irish tuath meaning "people, land" combined with flaith "princess".
Tubtim f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ทับทิม (see Thapthim).
Tucana f Astronomy
Tucana is one of the southern constellations created by Dutch explorers in the late 16th century. It was named after the toucan, a type of bird found in South America.
Tuccia f Ancient Roman
Feminine form of Tuccius, a name of Oscan derivation. This was the name of one of the Vestal Virgins.
Tuccia f Sicilian
Feminine form of Tuccio.
Tudalen f Breton
Feminine form of Tudal.
Tudalez f Breton
Feminine form of Tudal.
Tuding f Filipino
Very common diminutive of Gertrudes.
Tudinha f Portuguese
Portuguese diminutive form of Gertrudes.
Tudora f Romanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Tudor 2.
Tudorița f Romanian
Diminutive of Tudora, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Tudy f English (American, Rare)
Diminutive of Gertrude, as it is a variant of Trudy.... [more]
Tuff m & f Popular Culture
Tuff (Bun in the original Japanese version) is one of the main characters in the anime, Kirby: Right Back at Ya! (Hoshi no Kaabii in the original japanese, which translates to Kirby of the Stars). Tuff is an ally of Kirby and often plays a large role... [more]
Tuga f Croatian (Rare), Slavic Mythology
Means "sadness" in Croatian. According to a folk tradition, she and her sister Buga, together with their five brothers Klukas, Lobel, Kosenc, Muhlo and Hrvat, led the Croats into the ancient Roman province of Dalmatia in the 7th century.
Tuğanay f Bashkir
From Bashkir ай (ay) meaning "moon", with a first element of unknown etymology.
Tugela f English (British, Rare)
From the Tugela river in South Africa, first used as an English girl's name in 1900 to commemorate the battle of Tugela Heights in the Boer War. 36 girls were given the name in the UK in 1900, but it became extremely rare after then.
Tugend f German (Rare, Archaic)
Directly taken from German Tugend "virtue". This is one of the so-called pietistic names coined in the 18th century.
Tugendreich f German (Archaic)
Directly taken from German tugendreich "full of virtue". This is one of the so-called pietistic names coined in the 18th century.
Tugendsam f German (Archaic)
Derived from the German adjective tugendsam meaning "virtuous". This is one of the so-called Pietistic given names that were coined in Germany from the late 17th century onwards.
Tugiyem f Javanese
Meaning as of yet unknown.
Tugomila f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Tugomil.
Tugomira f Slovene
Feminine form of Tugomir.
Tui f & m Maori
Tui is the Maori name for the bird (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae), which are easily identified for their small tuft of white feathers at the neck.... [more]
Tuilelaith f Irish (Rare)
Original Gaelic form of Talulla.
Tuiren f Irish (Modern, Rare), Astronomy
Meaning unknown. Tuiren was a character in The Birth of Bran, a story in the book Irish Fairy Tales, written by James Stephens. A star has been named after her.
Tuka f Berber, Arabic
Means "Fear of God" in Berber.
Tukuma f & m Greenlandic
Greenlandic short form of Tukumaĸ.
Tukumaq f & m Greenlandic
Younger form of Tukumaĸ.
Tukúmeĸ f Greenlandic
Archaic spelling of Tukummeq.
Tukúmínguaĸ f Greenlandic
Greenlandic name with the combination of Tukúmeĸ and suffix -nnguaq meaning "sweet, dear".
Tûla f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Tora.
Tula f Spanish
Diminutive of Gertrudis.
Tula f English
Diminutive of Tallulah.
Tulan m & f Chinese (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Tu and Lan 1.
Tulasi f & m Indian, Odia, Hindi, Telugu, Kannada, Nepali
Alternate transcription of Tulsi.
Tuleen f Arabic
This was one of the most popular girls names in Jordan in 2020.
Tuli m & f Spanish
Short form of Tulio or Antulio.
Túlia f Hungarian
Hungarian borrowing of Tuuli.
Tulia f Spanish (Rare), Spanish (Latin American), Polish
Spanish feminine form of Tulio and Polish feminine form Tuliusz.
Tulimak m & f Inuit
Variant of Tulimaq.
Tulip f English (Rare)
From the name of the flower. Ultimately from Persian dulband, "turban", from the shape of the opened flower.... [more]
Tulisa f English (British, Modern)
Usage of this name is most likely adapted from British singer-songwriter Tula Paulinea Contostavlos (1988), who performs under the mononym Tulisa and has Greek ancestry. It is likely Tulisa is an elaboration or diminutive of her given name, Tula, a variant transcription of Toula.
Tulisa’a f Tongan
Short form of Petulisa.
Tulla f Late Roman
Feminine form of Tullus.
Tullan f Swedish
Swedish variant of Tulla.
Tulle f Danish (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Tulla.
Tullia f Swedish (Rare)
Feminine form of Tullius; in former times, it was occasionally used as a Latinization of Tolla.
Tullie f French (Rare)
French form of Tullia.
Tullik f Norwegian
Norwegian variant of Tulla.
Tulliola f Ancient Roman
Diminutive of Tullia. Cicero used this nickname for his beloved daughter Tullia.
Tulo f Provençal
Provençal form of Tulle.
Tulsa f English (American, Rare)
From the name of the city and county in the US state of Oklahoma which comes from Tallasi, meaning "old town" in the Creek.
Tulsi f & m Hinduism, Indian, Bengali, Hindi, Nepali
From Sanskrit तुलसी (tulasī) meaning "holy basil (a type of plant)". The plant is considered sacred in Hinduism, and it is sometimes personified as an avatar of Lakshmi.
Tulússe f Greenlandic
Archaic (Kleinschmidt orthography) spelling of Tulussi.
Tulussi f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Drusilla.
Tumara f Kyrgyz
Strictly feminine form of Tumar.
Tumek f Silesian
Silesian form of Tomek.
Tümen m & f Mongolian, Yakut
Means "ten thousand, multitude, myriad" or "people, nation" in Mongolian and Yakut, the attributive form of Mongolian түм (tüm). Among the Mongol and Turkic peoples, a tümen (tumen in English) was historically also a social and military unit of 10,000 households and soldiers.... [more]
Tumenbayar m & f Mongolian
Variant transcription of Tümenbayar.
Tumu-te-ana-oa f Polynesian Mythology
The personfication of echoes in Cook Islands mythology. Her name means "the cause of the call or voice heard from caves", from tumu meaning "cause", oa meaning "voice" and ana meaning "caves".
Tun m & f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese ထွန်း (see Htun).
Tuna m & f Turkish
Turkish name for the Danube River.
Tuna m & f Croatian (Rare)
Male variant and female form of Tuno.
Tunepi f Chuvash
Chuvash variant form of Dina 1.
Tunevel f Medieval Breton
Variant of Tunvel, which is of uncertain meaning (perhaps earlier Dunvael).
Tungalagtuyaa f Mongolian
From Mongolian тунгалаг (tungalag) meaning "serenity, clarity" or "clear, unclouded, transparent" and туяа (tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)"
Tungulag f & m Mongolian (Rare)
Variant transliteration of Tungalag.
Tunisha f African American (Modern)
Variant of Tanisha, perhaps influenced by the name of the country Tunisia.
Tunisia f English (American, Rare)
Taken directly from the name of the African country.
Tunnawiya f Hittite
Of uncertain etymology, but possibly using the Luwian suffix wiya ("woman"). Name borne by a ritual practitioner known from several compositions bearing her name.
Tunya f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ธัญญา (see Thanya).
Tunyarat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ธัญญารัตน์ (see Thanyarat).
Tuomikki f Finnish
Elaboration of Tuomi.
Tuonetar f Finnish Mythology
Tuonetar is the Queen of the Underworld in Finnish mythology. She is the wife of Tuoni, with whom she rules over the Underworld Tuonela.
Tuovi f & m Finnish
Derived from the place name Tuovila "village of Tove", a village in Finland. It was invented by the Finnish author Yrjö Sakari Yrjö-Koskinen for a character of his novel "Pohjan-Piltti" (1859).
Tupelo f Obscure
From the name of a type of tree, derived from Creek ito meaning "tree" and opilwa meaning "swamp", for which the city of Tupelo, Mississippi, was named. This is borne by American author Tupelo Hassman... [more]
Tuperna f Greenlandic
Short form of Tupernaq.
Tupper f & m English
Transferred use of the surname Tupper.
Tuqui f Spanish
Diminutive of Marta.
Tura f American
Noted bearer is American actress Tura Satana (1938-2011), born Suvaki to a Japanese-Filipino father and Cheyenne-Scots-Irish mother. She said of her names: 'Suvaki means "white chameleon" or "white flower" in Japanese, but in Cheyenne it's Tura'... [more]
Turan f Etruscan Mythology
Turan was the Etruscan goddess of love, fertility and vitality and patroness of the city of Velch. She was commonly associated with birds such as the dove, goose and above all the swan. Her name is the pre-Hellenic root of Turannos (absolute ruler, see tyrant), so Turan can be viewed as “Mistress".
Turanə f Azerbaijani
Strictly feminine form of Turan.
Turandokht f Iranian (Rare), Literature
Means "daughter of Turan", composed of Persian توران (Tūrān), a region of Central Asia that was part of the Persian Empire, allegedly meaning "land of Tur" (said to have been named for the legendary Persian prince Tur, a son of King Fereydoun who reigned around 750 BC), and دخت (dokht) "daughter".... [more]
Turandot f Theatre
Derived from the Persian name Turandokht, meaning "daughter of Turan" (Turan being a region in Central Asia). This is the name of the title character in an opera by Giacomo Puccini... [more]
Turhan m & f Turkish, Albanian
Turkish masculine name; meaning unknown. It is also occasionally used as a feminine name, as was the case of Turhan Hatice, wife of Sultan Ibrahim I of the Ottoman Empire.
Turia f Ancient Roman
A mangled spelling of Curia.... [more]