Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the first letter is H.
gender
usage
letter
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Haryanti f Javanese
Feminine form of Haryanto.
Harytyna f Ukrainian (Archaic), History (Ecclesiastical)
Variant transliteration of Харитина (see Haritina).
Hasala f Medieval German
Probably a hypochoristic form of names containing the name element hadu "battle, combat". In Old High German, the word hasala means "hazel", but I don't think that this is the etymology of the name.
Hasana f Muslim (Rare)
Feminine form of Hasan.
Hasanah f Arabic, Indonesian, Malay
Arabic alternate transcription of Hasana as well as the Indonesian and Malay form.
Hasbie f Albanian
Variant of Hasbije.
Hasbije f Albanian
Feminine form of Hasbi.
Haseena f Arabic
Meaning "beautiful, pretty" in Arabic.
Haseena f Urdu, Dhivehi
Alternate transcription of Urdu حسینہ (see Hasina), as well as the usual Dhivehi transcription.
Haseenah f Arabic
Variant of Haseena.
Hasel f English
Variant of Hazel.
Ha-seon m & f Korean
Korean unisex name derived from the hanja 河 (ha) meaning "river, stream" and 宣 (seon) meaning "declare, announce, proclaim".
Haseul f Korean
Haseul is a member from Loona
Haseya f Navajo
She rises
Hashana f Jewish Legend
Meaning “head of the year” or “first of the year,” the festival begins on the first day of Tishrei, the seventh month of the Hebrew calendar, which falls during September or October. ... Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are the two “High Holy Days” in the Jewish religion
Hashi m & f Japanese
波 means "wave, billow, surge." 紫 means "purple, violet."
Hashiki f Swahili
Means “doesn’t hold” in Swahili.
Hashimah f Malay
Feminine form of Hashim.
Hasia f Western African
Probably a spelling variant of Hassia.
Hasian f & m Batak
Means "darling, beloved" in Toba Batak.
Hasiba f Arabic, Bosnian
Feminine form of Hasib.
Hasibah f Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian form of Hasiba.
Hasibe f Turkish
Turkish form of Hasiba
Hasiholan m & f Batak
Means "longing, missed" in Toba Batak.
Hasije f Albanian
Variant of Hasie.
Hasimah f Malay
Malay feminine form of Hasim.
Hasimbola m & f Malagasy
From the Malagasy name for the Dracaena elliptica plant, which in folklore is reputed to bring wealth and happiness.
Hasime f Albanian
Feminine form of Hasim.
Hasina f & m Malagasy
Means "sanctity, virtue" in Malagasy.
Hasina f Urdu, Bengali, Dari Persian
Feminine form of Husayn.
Hasinaw-uk-kamuy f Ainu, Japanese Mythology
Ainu goddess (Kamuy) of the hunt.
Hasini f Indian
Hasini means smile. So for all of you with this name, ALWAYS smile!!!!
Hasiniaina m & f Malagasy
From the Malagasy hasina meaning "sacred power, sanctity, virtue" and aina meaning "life".
Hasintsoa m & f Malagasy
From the Malagasy hasina meaning "sacred power, sanctity, virtue" and soa meaning "good".
Hasitha m & f Sinhalese
Derived from Sanskrit हर्षिता (harṣita) meaning "delighted, happy, joyful".
Hasley f & m English, South American
Transferred use of the surname Hasley.
Hasmig f Armenian (Western)
Western Armenian transcription of Hasmik.
Hasnaa f Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic حسناء (see Hasna).
Hasnae f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic حسناء (see Hasna) chiefly used in Morocco.
Hasnah f Malay, Indonesian
Malay and Indonesian form of Hasna.
Hasni f & m Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Derived from Arabic حَسُنَ (hasuna) meaning "to be good, to be beautiful". It is unisex in Arabic-speaking countries and Malaysia while it is only feminine in Indonesia.
Hasoona f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hasoonah f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hasouna f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hassana f Muslim (Rare)
Feminine form of Hassan.
Hassiba f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi feminine form of Hasib (chiefly Algerian).
Hassie f & m American
Traditionally a diminutive of Hester. Also used as a diminutive of Harrison and therefore potentially of Harris.
Hassina f African, Arabic
Variant of Haseena used most often in Africa.
Hassouna f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hassuna f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hassunah f Arabic (Rare)
From Arabic حَسُّونَة (ḥassūnah) meaning "beautiful".
Ḫaštayar f Hittite
Of uncertain etymology. Name borne by a Hittite noblewoman who was speculated to be either a daughter or a wife of Hattusili I.
Hastings m & f English (American)
Transferred use of the surname Hastings.
Hastséoltoi f New World Mythology, Navajo
The name of the goddess of the chase or hunt in Navajo mythology.
Hasu f Japanese (Archaic)
The Edo Period pronunciation of Ren, meaning "lotus", which was only used as a female name.
Hasuki f Japanese
From Japanese, 蓮 (hasu) meaning "lotus" combined with 季 (ki) meaning "season" or 喜 (ki) meaning "joy". Other combinations are also possible.
Hasumi f & m Japanese
From Japanese 聾 (hasumi) meaning "deaf", 麓 (hasumi) meaning "base or foot of a hill or mountain", 録 (hasumi) meaning "copy" (for males) or 波 (ha) meaning "wave" or 蓮 (hasu) meaning "lotus" combined with 純 (sumi) meaning "pure, innocent", 澄 (sumi) meaning "clear, pure", 海 (mi) meaning "sea, ocean", 見 (mi) meaning "to see", 実 (mi) meaning "fruit, good result, truth", 水 (mi) meaning "water", 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful", 未 (mi) referring to the Sheep, the eighth of the twelve Earthly Branches or 實 (mi) meaning "reality, truth" (for females)... [more]
Hasuna f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hasuna f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 羽 (ha) meaning "feather, wing" combined with 澄 (su) meaning "clean; pure" and 那 (na), a phonetic character. Alternatively, it may be from 羽 (ha), 葉 (ha) meaning "leaf", or 遙 (ha) meaning "distant; far away" combined with 砂 (suna) or 沙 (suna), both meaning "sand"... [more]
Hasunah f Arabic (Rare)
Variant transcription of Arabic حسّونة (see Hassunah).
Hasya f Arabic
means beautiful perfect
Hasyimah f Malay
Variant of Hashimah.
Hataikan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Hathaikan.
Hataikarn f Thai
Alternate transcription of Hathaikan.
Hatairat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Hathairat.
Hataiwan f Thai
Alternate transcription of Hathaiwan.
Hate-evil f English (Puritan)
Referring to Psalm 97:10, "Ye that love the LORD, hate evil: he preserveth the souls of his saints; he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked."
Hatepuna f Near Eastern Mythology, Hattian Mythology
Her name originates in Hattic ha "sea" and puna "child". She is the daughter of the sea god and becomes the wife of Telipinu because of the rescue of Ištanu.
Hateya f Miwok
Means "press with the foot" or "make tracks" in the Miwok language, with the implied meaning being "bear making tracks in the dust". From the Miwok ha·t'ej.
Hathai f & m Thai
Means "heart, mind" in Thai.
Hathaichanok f Thai
From Thai หทัย (hathai) meaning "heart, mind" and ชนก (chanok) meaning "father".
Hathaikan f Thai
From Thai หทัย (hathai) meaning "heart, mind" and กานต์ (kan) maning "dear, beloved".
Hathaikarn f Thai
Alternate transcription of Hathaikan.
Hathairat f Thai
From Thai หทัย (hathai) meaning "heart, mind" and รัตน์ (rat) meaning "gem, jewel".
Hathaiwan f Thai
From Thai หทัย (hathai) meaning "heart, mind" and วรรณ (wan) meaning "colour, tint".
Hathaway m & f English (Rare), English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Hathaway. Hathaway was given to 14 girls in 2017.
Hathin f Literature
Used in the book Gullstruck Island as the name of the protagonist.
Hathorhotep f Ancient Egyptian
Means "Hathor is satisfied" in Egyptian.
Hati m & f Norse Mythology, Swedish (Rare), Finnish, Old Norse
Means "despiser, hater". In Norse mythology Hati is a wolf who pursues the moon. He is the son of Hróðvitnir (another name for Fenrir), the father of Hrímgarðr, and the brother of Skǫll, who pursues the sun.
Hatice Kübra f Turkish
Combination of Hatice and Kübra.
Haticet f Adyghe, Kabardian, Circassian
Circassian version of Hatice
Hatidzhe f Bulgarian
Bulgarian form of Khadija.
Hatidzse f Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian phonetic transciption of Khadija.
Hatijah f Indonesian, Malay
Indonesian and Malay form of Khadija.
Hatima f Swahili
Means "fate" in Swahili.
Hatıra f Turkish
Memories, what we remember
Hatixhe f Albanian
Albanian form of Hatice.
Hatixheja f History
Albanian form of Khadija, used to refer to Khadijah bint Khuwaylid, the first wife and first follower of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.
Hato f Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (ha) meaning "feathers" combined with 翔 (to) meaning "soar, fly". Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Hatoko f Japanese
From Japanese 鳩 (hato) meaning "dove, pigeon" and 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hatomi f Japanese
From Japanese 鳩 (hato) meaning "dove, pigeon" and 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hatsadi m & f Lao
Means "laugh, laughter" in Lao.
Hatsu f Japanese
This name can be used as 初 (sho, ui-, -so.meru, -zo.me, haji.me, haji.mete, hatsu, hatsu-) meaning "beginning, first time" or 波津 with 波 (ha, nami) meaning "billows, Poland, waves" and 津 (shin, tsu) meaning "ferry, harbour, haven, port."... [more]
Hatsuharu m & f Japanese
Hatsuharu is a japanese name used for both boys and girls. It is uncommon, along with its meaning: “First spring day” “First spring” “Start of spring” “First spring month” “Early spring”
Hatsuka f Japanese
From Japanese 初 (hatsu) meaning "beginning, start, first" combined with 夏 (ka) meaning "summer". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hatsuki m & f Japanese
Variant of Hadzuki.
Hatsume f Japanese
From Japanese 極 (hatsu) meaning "very, extremely" combined with 芽 (me) meaning "bud, sprout, shoot". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hatsumi f Japanese
Meaning 'begining beauty' from hatsu meaning 'beginning' and mi meaning 'beauty'. Variants include Hatsuyo, Hatsuka and Hatsuko.
Hatsumomo f Literature, Popular Culture
From Japanese 初 (hatsu) meaning "first, new" combined with 桃 (momo) meaning "peach," as borne by the fictional character Hatsumomo in the 1997 book 'Memoirs of a Geisha' by Arthur Golden and its 2005 movie adaptation.
Hatsuna f Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (ha) meaning "feathers", 津 (tsu), a place name, such as Tsu city in Mie prefecture combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Hatsune f Japanese
From Japanese 初 (hatsu) "first, new" or 発 (hatsu) "radiate, emit" combined with 音 (ne) "sound." It is written はつね using the hiragana writing system. A famous bearer (used as a surname) includes Miku Hatsune, the first Vocaloid2 singing synthesizer made by Yamaha.
Hatsuno f Japanese
From Japanese 初 (hatsu) meaning "beginning, start, first" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle. Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Hatsuro f Japanese
From Japanese 初 (hatsu) meaning "beginning, start, first" combined with 蕗 (ro) meaning "butterbur". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Hatsuyo f Japanese
From 初 (hatsu) meaning "first, original, beginning" or 肇 (hatsu) meaning "begin, start" combined with 陽 () meaning "light, sunshine, male" or 洋 () meaning "ocean"... [more]
Hatsuyuki f Japanese (?)
Combination of 初 "first, new" and 雪 "snow".
Hattye f English
Variant of Hattie.
Hatun f Turkish (Rare)
Means "lady, woman" in Turkish.
Hatuna f Georgian
Variant transcription of Khatuna.
Hatyja f Turkmen
Turkmen form of Khadija.
Hậu m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 侯 (hậu) meaning "lord, nobleman" or 厚 (hậu) meaning "thick".
Hau m & f Ancient Egyptian
Probably from Egyptian ḥꜣw meaning "abundance, riches; surplus".
Haua f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Eve, through Arabic Hawa.
Haude f Old Celtic (Gallicized), History (Ecclesiastical), French
Gallicized form of the Celtic name Eodez or Heodez.... [more]
Hauk m & f East Frisian (Rare), North Frisian (Rare), West Frisian (Rare)
Frisian short form of Germanic given names that have hugu meaning "heart, mind, spirit" for a first element, such as Hugubert. Also compare Haug, which this name could be considered to be a variant form of.
Haulwen f Welsh
Feminine form of Haulwyn.
Haumanava m & f Tahitian
Combination of Tahitian hau meaning "peace" and manava meaning "welcome".
Haumėja f Astronomy, Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Haumea.
Haumiatiketike f & m Maori
Long form of Haumia. The god of wild food in Māori myth.
Hauʻoli m & f Hawaiian
Means "happiness" in Hawaiian. This name was used by American actress Mary Astor as a middle name for her daughter, Marylyn Hauoli Thorpe, who was born in 1932 in Honolulu, Hawaii. A known bearer is American football player Hauʻoli Kikaha (1992-).
Haurlaug f Old Norse
Old Norse combination of haƀuraR "buck", "he-goat" and laug possibly meaning "betrothed woman".
Hausos f Mythology (Hypothetical)
Anglicized form of Proto-Indo-European *h₂éwsōs, literally "dawn". This is the reconstructed name of the dawn goddess in the Proto-Indo-European mythology, equivalent to the Greek Eos and the Roman Aurora, among others.
Hava f Albanian
Derived from Albanian hava "sky; open air".
Havana f English (Modern)
From the name of the capital city of Cuba (see Havana). The 2017 song Havana by Cuban-American singer Camila Cabello caused this name to gain some popularity, along with its similarity in sound to Savannah.
Havasgul f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek havas meaning "desire" and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Havaska f Hungarian
Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from Hungarian havas "snowy, snow-covered; mountain" and a modern form of an alleged Old Hungarian given name Havadi which is said to have meant "moon" in Old Hungarian, whereas in modern Szekler-Hungarian havadi is a general term for white springflowers, most commonly the white narcissus or the snowdrop flower.
Havat m & f Armenian
Means "belief" in Armenian.
Have-mercy f & m English (Puritan)
Referring to a prayer for mercy if the life of the child or mother was endangered.
Haverjh f Armenian
Means "eternally, forever" in Armenian.
Haviland f English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Haviland.
Havîn f Kurdish
Derived from Kurdish havîn meaning "summer".
Havin f Turkish
Means "summer nights" in Turkish.
Havise f Norman
Norman form of Hawise.
Haviva f Hebrew
Alternate transcription of Hebrew חֲבִיבָה (see Chaviva).
Havo f Uzbek
Means "sky, weather" in Uzbek.
Havogul f Uzbek
Derived from havo which can mean "sky", "weather" or "melody" and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Havojon f Uzbek
Derived from havo which can mean "sky", "weather" or "melody" and jon meaning "spirit, soul".
Havryila f Ukrainian (Rare)
Feminine form of Havryil.
Havu m & f Finnish (Rare)
Means "fresh sprig or small branch of a coniferous tree" or "needle of a coniferous tree".
Havvo f Uzbek
Uzbek form of Hawa.
Hawabelle f Obscure
Combination of Hawa and Belle.
Hawaii f American (Modern, Rare)
From the name of the US state, of uncertain origin. ... [more]
Hawaiki f Tahitian
Derived from Proto-Polynesian Sawaiki meaning "Ra'iātea", referring to the island of which the Polynesian peoples originated from. Today, Ra'iātea is the second largest island in French Polynesia.
Hawaiki m & f Maori
Means "sacred homeland" in Māori.
Hawaikii f & m Maori
Its a pretty cool name.
Hawanatu f Western African
Possibly a form of Hawa, used in Sierra Leone.
Hawariah f Indonesian, Malay
Feminine form of Hawari.
Hawea f Hawaiian
Possibly taken from hāwea, the name of a mythical drum brought from Tahiti.
Hawi f & m Luo
"good luck"
Hawîn m & f Kurdish
Means "summer" in Kurdish.
Hawiz f Medieval Breton
Breton cognate of Hawise.
Hawj m & f Hmong
Means "energetic, spirited, active" in Hmong Daw.
Hawka f Quechua
Means "carefree" in Quechua.
Hawkeye m & f English, Popular Culture
From the English words "Hawk", referring to the type of predatory bird, and "eye". Having a 'hawkeye' means being "particularly observant, especially to small details, or having excellent vision in general".... [more]
Hawo f Somali, African
Somali variant of Hawa.
Hawra f Arabic, Muslim
Means "having eyes with a marked contrast of black and white; gazelle-eyed" in Arabic. ... [more]
Hawrī f Balochi
Derived from hawr meaning "rain".
Hawwa f Dhivehi
Dhivehi form of Hawa (see Eve).
Hawwah f Hebrew, Arabic
Name of Eve in Judaism and Islam.
Haxhere f Albanian
Albanian form of Hacer.
Haxhije f Albanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Haxhi.
Hay f & m English (Rare)
Nickname for Hannah, Hayley, Hayden and other names beginning with the letter H
Haya f & m Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (ha) meaning "feathers" combined with 弥 (ya) meaning "universally". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Haya f Hebrew
Alternate transcription of Chaya.
Hayako f Japanese
From Japanese 玻 (ha) meaning "glass", 矢 (ya) meaning "arrow" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other combinations of kanji characters are also possible.
Hayal f Turkish
Means "dream, fantasy, reverie, illusion, imagination" in Turkish.
Hayan f & m Korean (Modern)
From the present determiner form of the adjective 하얗다 (hayata) meaning "(pure) white/pale."
Hayano f Japanese
From Japanese 迅 (haya) meaning "swift, fast" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle. Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Hayarpi f Armenian
Feminine Armenian feminine name derived from հայ (hay) meaning "Armenian" and արեւ (arev) meaning "sun".
Hayase f Japanese
From Japanese Hayase (早瀬) meaning “rapids” or “swift current.” This is the first name of the main female supporting character in ‘Please Don’t Bully Me, Nagatoro.’
Həyat f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Hayat.
Hayati f Malay, Indonesian
Means "my life", from Arabic حياة (hayah) meaning "life".
Hayatt f Arabic, American
meanig life in arabic
Haybat f Uzbek
Means "grandeur" in Uzbek.
Hayde m & f English
Short form of Hayden.
Haydee f English
Anglicized form of Haydée or a variant of Heidi.
Haydelis f American (Hispanic, Rare)
Variant of Aideliz, or an elaboration of Haydée.
Ha-yeong f Korean
From Sino-Korean 夏 "summer; great, grand, big" and 榮 "glory, honor; flourish, prosper".
Hayes m & f English (American, Americanized, Modern), English (American)
From a surname, Hayes, and also used as a modern diminutive of Hazel for girls.
Ha-ye-seul f Korean (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the first syllable of Haneul and Ye-seul.
Hayırqız f Karachay-Balkar
From the Karachay-Balkar хайыр (hayır) meaning "benefit", or the Arabic خَيْر (ḵayr) or Persian خیر (xeyr) meaning "good", and къыз (qız) meaning "girl".
Hayitbibi f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and bibi meaning "learned woman".
Hayitgul f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Hayitjon f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and jon meaning "spirit, soul".
Hayitnoz f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and noz meaning "flirtiousness", "whim", "tenderness" or "fondness".
Hayitoy f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and oy meaning "moon".
Hayitqiz f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayit meaning "feast day, holiday" and qiz meaning "girl".
Haykanush f Armenian
From the name Hayk and Անուշ (anush) meaning "sweet".
Haykuhi f Armenian
Derived from the name Hayk and the feminine suffix ուհի (uhi).
Haykush f Armenian
Variant spelling of Haykanush.
Hayla f English (Modern)
Combination of Hayley and Kayla
Hayle f English
Variant of Hayley.
Haylei f English
Variant of Hayley.
Hayles f English
Diminutive of Hayley.
Hayleyann f English
The name Hayleyann is a combination of the English names Hayley, meaning “meadow” or “hero” and Ann, meaning “gracious.” When combined, the name can mean “gracious meadow” or “gracious hero.”
Haylin f English (Rare, ?), American (Hispanic)
Rare variant of Hailyn or Halen. As a Hispanic name, it could be a variant of Aylín or Ailyn.
Haylynn f English (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Hayley and the popular name suffix lyn. This is borne by Haylynn Cohen (1980-), an American model.
Hayman f Burmese
Means "winter" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit हेमन्त (hemanta).
Haymar f Burmese
Means "deep forest" in Burmese, ultimately from Sanskrit हिम (hima) meaning "cold, frost".
Haymarn f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese ဟေမာန် (see Hayman).
Hayotgul f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek hayot meaning "life" and gul meaning "rose, flower".
Hayoung f Korean
From Sino-Korean 夏 meaning "summer; great, grand, big" and 英 (yeong) meaning "flower, petal, brave, hero". Other combinations are possible
Hayranidil f Ottoman Turkish
From Arabic حيران (hayran) meaning "perplexed, astonished" and Persian دل (dil) meaning "heart".
Hayrbībī f Balochi
Derived from hayr meaning "wellbeing" and bībī meaning "lady".
Hayriye f Turkish
Means "auspicious" in Turkish.
Hayrünnisa f Turkish
Turkish form of Khairunnisa. A notable bearer is the former First Lady of Turkey, Hayrünnisa Gül.
Haysel f English (British)
From hay + sele (“season”). Meaning haying season, also used as an alternative form of Hazel or Hayes.
Hayu f Javanese
Variant of Ayu.
Hayuma m & f Japanese
From Japanese 覇 (ha) meaning "rule by might rather than right", 夕 (yu) meaning "evening", 隼 (hayu) meaning "falcon" or 映 (hayu) meaning "a reflection; to reflect" combined with 真 (ma) meaning "real, genuine" or 磨 (ma) meaning "to polish, to grind, to brush (teeth)"... [more]
Hayven f & m English (Modern)
Variant of Haven.
Haza f Chechen
Means "beautiful" in Chechen
Häžär f Bashkir
Possibly a Bashkir form of Hajar.
Hazar f Arabic
Means "vigilant, cautious, careful" in Arabic.
Hazarvart f Armenian
Means "thousand roses" in Armenian.
Hazecha f Medieval German
A diminutive form of names with the secondary German name element HAZ derived from the Germanic name element HAD "battle, combat".... [more]
Hazel f Turkish
Variant of Hazal.
Hazeleigh f English (American, Modern)
Combination of Hazel and the suffix Leigh
Hazelelponi f Biblical
Means "shade coming upon me" in Hebrew. This is the name of a woman of the tribe of Judah mentioned in 1 Chronicles 4:8.
Hazeline f American
Elaboration of Hazel.
Hazell f English (Rare)
Variant of Hazel. A notable bearer is English singer Hazell Dean (1952-).
Hazelyn f English (Modern, Rare)
Elaboration of Hazel using the popular name suffix lyn.
Hazey f English
Diminutive of Hazel.
Haziel m & f Biblical
Means "god is seeing" in Hebrew. It can also be a variant of Hazael
Hazima f Arabic
Feminine form of Hazim.
Hazimah f Arabic, Malay
Alternate transcription of Arabic حازمة (see Hazima), as well as the usual Malay form.
Hazle f English
Variant of Hazel.
Hazley f & m English
Transferred use of the surname Hazley or combination of the word haze with common suffix -ley.
Hazlitt m & f English
Transferred use of surname Hazlitt.
Hazrâ f Turkish
Green، also means sky.
Hazuki f Japanese
Variant transcription of Hadzuki.
Hazvinei f Shona
Hazvinei means "Never mind, no worries". This name may be given by a parent who was offended
Hazviperi m & f Shona
"It does not end". Situational name given in circumstances where family faced unending troubles or trials.
Hazwani f Malay
Feminine form of Hazwan.
Hazy f English (American)
Diminutive of Hazel.
Hazzelelponi f Biblical Hebrew
A Biblical Hebrew name meaning ‘the shade-facing’. She was known as the daughter of Etam and a descendant of Judah, along with being the sister of Idbash, Ishma and Jezreel. In rabbinical sources, she was under the name ‘Zelelponith’ and was the wife of Manoah and mother of Samson... [more]
Heahhild f Anglo-Saxon (Hypothetical)
Possible Old English name derived from the elements heah meaning "high, tall" and hild meaning "battle".
Healani f Hawaiian
Means "heavenly mist", from hea meaning "mist" and lani meaning "sky, heaven".
Heanriga f Anglo-Saxon
Old English form of Harriet and Henrietta, deriving from Old English Heanric.
Heartlee f American (Modern, Rare)
Feminine variant of Hartley or a combination of Heart and Lee.
Heartley f English (American, Rare)
Feminine variant of Hartley influenced by the English word: Heart.
Heater f English
Variant of Heather.