This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is masculine; and the first letter is T.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Tristani m GeorgianForm of
Tristan with the nominative suffix, used in Georgian when the name is written stand-alone.
Trisula m IndonesianMeans "trident" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit त्रिशूल
(triśūla).
Trito m Mythology (Hypothetical)Anglicized form of Proto-Indo-European
*tritós "third". This is a reconstructed name of a significant figure in Proto-Indo-European mythology, representing the first warrior and acting as a cultural hero comparable to the Vedic
Trita and Norse
Þriði.
Triúnn m Old NorseFrom Old Norse
trjónn (compare with Faroese
trónur meaning "nose, snout") or formed from Old Norse
trjóna meaning "nose, snout".
Troezen m Greek Mythology (Latinized)Latinized form of Greek Τροιζήν
(Troizen), which may possibly have been derived from Greek Τροία
(Troia), the original Greek name for the city of Troy. Troezen might then roughly mean "of Troy"... [
more]
Trội m VietnameseMeans "excellent, oustanding" or "to surpass" in Vietnamese.
Trojan m Serbian, CroatianFrom Serbian
троје (troje) literally meaning "three people" but denoting "trinity".
Trojanus m Ancient RomanEither from the old city of Troy or the tribe. Used by saint trojanus of france a sixth century saint.
Trọng m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 重
(trọng) meaning "repeat, duplicate".
Trot f & m LiteratureFrom 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.
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]
Trpimir m CroatianDerived from the Slavic elements
trpi "endure, bear, suffer" and
mir meaning "peace" or "world".
True-heart m English (Puritan)Referring to Hebrews 10:22, "Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water."
Trung m VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 忠
(trung) meaning "loyalty, devotion" or 中
(trung) meaning "middle".
Trust m & f English (Rare, Archaic)Middle English from Old Norse
traust, from
traustr ‘strong’; the verb from Old Norse
treysta, assimilated to the noun.
Truxton m English (American)Transferred use of the surname
Truxton. It was used by the American author George Barr McCutcheon for the title character of his novel
Truxton King (1909).
Truyền m & f VietnameseFrom Sino-Vietnamese 傳 (
truyền) meaning "to pass to, to pass down".
Tryantha f & m Englishcomes from greek tryphe meaning "softness, delicacy" and anthos meaning "flower"
Tryggúlfr m Old NorseDerived from Old Norse
tryggr "trustworthy" combined with Old Norse
úlfr "wolf."
Trzebimir m Medieval PolishComposed of the Polish element
trzebić from Old Slavic
trěbiti "clear, ritually cleanse, sacrifice" and Old Slavic element
mirŭ "peace, world".
Trzebowit m PolishMeaning "rulers sacrifice", composed of the Old Polish elements
trzebo "sacrifice, offering" and
wit "lord, ruler".
Tsagaan-arslan m & f MongolianMeans "white lion" in Mongolian. It can refer to a legendary white lion or white antelope.
Tsagaanchuluu m & f MongolianMeans "white stone" in Mongolian, from цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white" and чулуу
(chuluu) meaning "rock, stone".
Tsagaandalai f & m MongolianMeans "white sea" in Mongolian, from цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white" and далай
(dalai) meaning "ocean, sea".
Tsagaandorzh m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white, fair" and дорж
(dorj) meaning "diamond, vajra", deriving from Tibetan རྡོ་རྗེ
(rdo rje) (see
Dorji).
Tsagaankhüü m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white, fair" and хүү
(khüü) meaning "son, boy" or "dear, beloved".
Tsaina m & f MalagasyMeans "mind, intellect" or "flag, banner" in Malagasy.
Tsakani f & m South African, TsongaThe meaning is "to be happy". It was popularized by Tsakani Mhinga. She was a South African singer who died in 2006.... [
more]
Tsali m CherokeeName of a notable leader of the Cherokee tribe during the early 1800s.
Tsangchung m & f TibetanDerived from the Tibetan
ཆུང (tsang) meaning "complete, entire" and
ཆུང (chung) meaning "little".
Tsao m & f ChineseThe traditional form of the mandarin Cao. Tsao is commonly used in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Tsaraleha m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
leha meaning "movement".
Tsaramandresy m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
mandresy meaning "conquer", or the Malagasy name for the Ficus grevei tree.
Tsarasata m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
sata meaning "habit, custom".
Tsasanshuurga m & f MongolianMeans "snowstorm, blizzard" in Mongolian, from цас
(tsas) meaning "snow" and шуурга
(shuurga) meaning "storm".
Tsaschikher m & f MongolianPossibly from Mongolian цас
(tsas) meaning "snow" and чихэр
(chikher) meaning "sweet, sugar, candy".
Tseden m & f MongolianFrom Tibetan ཚེ་ལྡན
(tshe ldan) meaning "alive, living; venerable", from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and ལྡན
(ldan) meaning "to possess; to be devoted to".
Tselha f & m TibetanTselha is a unisex name of Tibetan origin. It's comprised of ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and ལྷ (lha) meaning "god/dess."
Tsengelchuluun f & m MongolianFrom the Mongolian цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "feast, merrymaking, gaiety" and чулуун
(chuluun) meaning "stone".
Tsengeldüüren m & f MongolianMeans "full of joy" in Mongolian, from цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "celebration, merrymaking, happiness" and дүүрэн
(düüren) meaning "full, complete".
Tsengelsaikhan f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "feast, merrymaking, gaiety" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".
Tsepak m & f Buddhism, TibetanFrom Tibetan ཚེ་དཔག
(tshe-dpag) meaning "immeasurable life, boundless life", derived from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and དཔག
(dpag) meaning "measure, limit"... [
more]
Tseren m & f Kalmyk, MongolianKalmyk and Mongolian form of
Tshering. It is solely used as a masculine name in Kalmykia while it is unisex in Mongolia.
Tserenbal m & f MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" combined with бал
(bal) meaning "honey".
Tserenbayar m & f MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" and Mongolian баяр
(bayar) meaning "celebration, joy".
Tserendorj m MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" combined with རྡོ་རྗེ
(rdo je) meaning "diamond" or "Vajra" (a mace or symbol used in Buddhist ritual).
Tsetsenbaatar m MongolianMeans "intelligent hero, profound hero" in Mongolian, from цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "wise, intelligent, profound" and баатар
(baatar) meaning "hero".
Tsetsenbayar m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "wise, intelligent, profound" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "joy, celebration".
Tsetsentsengel m & f MongolianFrom цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "intelligent, profound" and цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "joy, happiness, celebration".
Tsetsenzhargal f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "wise, intelligent, profound" and жаргал
(jargal) meaning "happiness, blessing".
Tsevel f & m MongolianDerived from a Tibetan name composed of ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and སྤེལ
(spel) meaning "to increase, spread, develop, encourage".
Tsheej m HmongMeans "to be steady, set, having a strong foundation" in Hmong.
Tshela m & f Central AfricanWestern Luba unisex name derived from the phrase
cyela makàsà meaning "enfant born feet first".
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".
Tshiandanda m & f LubaThis name is given by Luba people when the newborn has at least four older siblings of the opposite gender.
Tshilidzi f & m VendaPossibly means "Grace". A notable bearer is Tshilidzi Marwala, Deputy Vice Chancellor for Research and Internationalisation at the University of Johannesburg.
Tsiafoy m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
afoy meaning "abandoned, forsaken".
Tsiferana m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
ferana meaning "limited, restrained".
Tsihala m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
hala meaning "hated, abhorred".
Tsikiaina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsiky meaning "smile" and
aina meaning "life".
Tsilavina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
lavina meaning "refused, rejected, denied".
Tsing m & f ChineseMeans "continuous", "huge" or "nuclear" possibly in Xia, spoken in China.
Tsiory m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
ory meaning "miserable".
Tsirava m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
rava meaning "ruined, destroyed".
Tsiresy m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
resy meaning "defeated".
Tsirihanitra m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsiry meaning "bud, shoot" and
hanitra meaning "good odour, fragrance, perfume".
Tsirompisama f & m AsháninkaEtymology uncertain, allegedly the name of a type of plant and possibly from the Ashaninka
tsirompi meaning "orchid".
Tsiskara m Georgian (Rare)Derived from the Georgian noun ცისკარი
(tsiskari) meaning "sunrise, dawn, daybreak". It is a compound word that consists of Georgian ცის
(tsis) meaning "of the sky" and Georgian კარი
(kari) meaning "door"... [
more]
Tsivery m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
very meaning "lost".
Tsizaraina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
zaraina meaning "divided".
Tsoede m African MythologyA culture hero of the Nupe people (west-central Nigeria). He seized the throne by killing his uncle and extended the frontiers of his kingdom. He introduced his subjects to the rudiments of technology, showing them how to build canoes and how to work metals... [
more]
Tsog m & f MongolianMeans "embers, glowing coals" or "splendour, glory" in Mongolian.
Tsogbaatar m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and баатар
(baatar) meaning "hero".
Tsogbadrakh m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, embers, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and бадрах
(badrakh) meaning "thrive, grow, prosper" or "blaze, shine".
Tsogbayar m & f MongolianDerived from цог
(tsog) meaning "embers, glowing coals" or "splendour, glory" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "joy, happiness".
Tsogdelger m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "splendour, glory" and дэлгэр
(delger) meaning "vast, wide" or "prosperous, abundant".
Tsog-erdene m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, embers, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and эрдэнэ
(erdene) meaning "jewel, treasure".
Tsogmagnai m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and магнай
(magnai) meaning "front, foremost" or "forehead, brow".
Tsogmandakh m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and мандах
(mandakh) meaning "ascent, rising".
Tsognemekh m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, embers, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and нэмэх
(nemekh) meaning "to add, increase, enhance".
Tsogsaikhan m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".
Tsogtbayar m MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "celebration, joy".
Tsogtbuyan m MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and буян
(buyan) meaning "good deed, virtue, charity" or "good luck, fortune, blessing".
Tsogt-erdene m MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and эрдэнэ
(erdene) meaning "jewel, treasure" or "precious".
Tsogtgerel m & f MongolianDerived from Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "ardent, energetic, brilliant" and гэрэл
(gerel) meaning "light".
Tsogt-itgel m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and итгэл
(itgel) meaning "trust, faith, belief".
Tsogtkhishig m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and хишиг
(khishig) meaning "grace, blessing, favour".
Tsogtkhuyag m MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and хуяг
(khuyag) meaning "armour".
Tsogtmagnai m MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and магнай
(magnai) meaning "front, foremost" or "forehead".
Tsogtmönkh m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and мөнх
(mönkh) meaning "forever, eternal".
Tsogtsaikhan m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".