Slavic Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the language is Slavic.
gender
usage
language
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Belkisa f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Bilqis.
Belmin m Bosnian
Male form of Belma.
Belmina f Bosnian
Feminine form of Belmin.
Belmir m Bosnian
Variant of Belmin.
Belmondo m Croatian (Rare)
Means "beautiful world", from Italian bel "beautiful, pleasant" and mondo "world". It is used as a surname in Italy.
Belo m Slovak
Slovak form of Béla.
Belomir m Croatian
Variant form of Belimir.
Belomira f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Belomir.
Beloslav m Bulgarian
Variant form of Belislav.
Beloslava f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Beloslav. Beloslava of Bulgaria was a Bulgarian princess and Queen consort of Serbia between 1234 and 1243. She was the wife of king Stefan Vladislav I.
Bena f Polish
Diminutive form of Benigna, Bernarda, or Bernardyna.
Bena f Lithuanian, Slovene
Lithuanian short form of names beginning with Ben- such as Benedikta and Slovene diminutive of Benedikta and Benjamina.
Beňadik m Slovak
Slovak form of Benedict.
Bendzhamen m Russian (Rare)
Russian transcription of Benjamin, reflecting the English pronunciation.
Benek m Polish
Diminutive of Benedykt.
Benia m & f Georgian, Kashubian
Georgian short form of Beniamin as well as a Kashubian diminutive of Benedikta, Beniamina and Bernatka.... [more]
Beniadzikt m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Benedict.
Beniamina f Kashubian, Sicilian
Kashubian feminine form of Beniamin and Sicilian feminine form of Beniaminu.
Benica f Slovene
Diminutive of Benedikta. The name coincides with a place name in Slovenia.
Benigny m Polish
Polish form of Benignus.
Benilda f Filipino, Spanish, Polish (Rare)
Spanish variant and Polish form of the Germanic name Bernhilde, which came into common usage thanks to the martyr and saint Benilde de Córdoba (known as Saint Benildis in English, died circa 853).... [more]
Beninja f Slovene
Diminutive of Benedikta.
Bénk m Kashubian
Diminutive of Beno.
Benka f Slovene
Diminutive of Benjamina.
Beno m Georgian, German (Bessarabian), Kashubian
Short form of names beginning with Ben-, such as Benedikt (German and Kashubian), Benedikte (Georgian) and Beniamin (Georgian and Kashubian).... [more]
Beno m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Benno. Beno Budar (*1946) is a Sorbian writer and translator.
Benon m Polish
Polish form of Benno.
Benona f Polish
Feminine form of Benon.
Benzhamen m Russian (Rare), Bulgarian (Rare)
Russian and Bulgarian form of Benjamin, reflecting the English pronunciation.
Bepo m Croatian
Diminutive of Giuseppe, used mainly in coastal areas of Croatia.
Berbel f Sorbian, Dutch (Rare)
Sorbian and Dutch diminutive of Borbora and Barbara (compare Bärbel).
Berbla f Silesian
Silesian diminutive of Barbara.
Bercik m Silesian
Diminutive of Bernard as well as of names ending in -bert.
Bereniczka f Polish
Diminutive of Berenika.
Berenisia f Polish
Diminutive of Berenika.
Bereza m Medieval Slavic
Derived from medieval Slavic береза (bereza) meaning "birch tree".
Berimir m Croatian
Derived from Slavic brati "reap, gather" (also see Berislav) combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Berimira f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Berimir.
Berina f Bosnian
Feminine form of Berin.
Berislava f Croatian
Feminine form of Berislav.
Berivoj m Croatian (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements birati "to take, to gather" (in an inflected form) and voi "soldier".
Beriz m Bosnian
Possibly related to Baraz.
Berlwin m Old High German, Medieval, Medieval Polish, Medieval French
An elongation of Old High German, Old Saxon bero "bear" + Old High German wini "friend".
Bernadet f Sorbian
Sorbian form of Bernadette.
Bernardeta f Lithuanian, Polish, Albanian, Czech
Albanian, Czech, Lithuanian and Polish form of Bernardette.
Bernardika f Slovene
Originally a diminutive of Bernarda, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Bernardka f Slovene
Originally a diminutive of Bernarda, used as a given name in its own right. This name is also treated as the Slovene form of Bernadette.
Bernardyna f Polish
Feminine form of Bernardyn.
Bernasz m Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish variant of Bernardyn.
Bernatka f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bernadette.
Bero m Croatian
Croatian short form of Berislav.
Bertica f Slovene
Diminutive of Berta.
Bertička f Czech
Diminutive of Berta, not used as a given name in its own right.
Bertík m Czech
Diminutive of Albert, not used as a given name in its own right.
Bertka f Slovene
Diminutive of Berta.
Berunka f Czech
Diminutive form of Berenika.
Beruša f Czech (Rare), Slovak (Rare)
Czech and Slovak diminutive of Berenika. Also compare Beruška.
Beruška f Czech, Slovak
Czech and Slovak diminutive of Berenika. Also compare Beruša.
Beryoza m Soviet, Russian (Rare)
Derived from the Russian noun берёза (beryoza) meaning "birch tree". Also compare Bereza, which is a medieval first name of the same etymological origin.... [more]
Béta f Kashubian
Diminutive of Elżbiéta and Erzsébet.
Běta f Czech
Diminutive of Alžběta.
Beta f Slovak, Portuguese (Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare), Romansh
Slovak diminutive of Alžbeta (not used as a given name in its own right), Portuguese diminutive of Elisabete, Alberta ou Roberta and Romansh variant of Betta.
Beti f Croatian, Serbian, Slovene
A short form of Elizabeta.
Betica f Slovene
Dimintutive form of Elizabeta.
Bětka f Czech
Diminutive of Alžběta via the variant diminutive Běta.
Betka f Slovene
Originally a diminutive of Elizabeta, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Betsabe f Polish
Variant of Batszeba.
Bětunka f Czech (Rare)
A diminutive of the female given name Běta, a pet form of Alžběta. Alžběta is the Czech form of English Elizabeth... [more]
Bětuše f Czech
Diminutive form of Alžběta.
Bětuška f Czech (Rare)
Diminutive of Alžběta, rarely used as a given name in its own right.
Biagota f Medieval Slavic, Medieval Czech
Of uncertain origin and meaning; current theories, however, include a form of Blahota or Bjegota... [more]
Bianihna f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Benigna.
Biba f Croatian, Slovene
Short form of names beginning with the element Bi-, such as Biserka and Biljana.
Bibian m Polish
Masculine equivalent of Bibiana.
Bibianna f Polish
Variant of Bibiana.
Bibijana f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene form of Bibiana.
Bibunia f Polish
Diminutive of Bibiana and Bibianna.
Bibusia f Polish
Diminutive of Bibiana and Bibianna.
Bieatryks f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Beatrix.
Biecsława f Polish
Feminine form of Biecsław.
Biernardyn m Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish variant of Bernardyn.
Bieta f Polish
Diminutive of Elżbieta.
Bietka f Polish
Diminutive of Elżbieta.
Biliana f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Биляна (see Bilyana).
Bilka f Slovene
Diminutive of Biljana.
Bina f Breton, Slovene
Short form of Albina.
Binca f Slovene
Short form of Albinca.
Bink m Kashubian
Diminutive of Albin.
Binka f Kashubian
Diminutive of names ending in -bina, such as Albina and Sabina.
Bira f Polish
Diminutive form of Biruta.
Biser m Bulgarian
Maculine form of Bisera.
Biserko m Croatian
Croatian male form of Biserka.
Bivoj m Czech (Rare)
Allegedly derived from Czech bíti "to smite; to beat; to fight" and the Slavic element voji "soldier".
Bizas m Bosnian, Spanish (Rare), Portuguese (Rare)
Bosnian, Spanish and Portuguese form of Byzas.
Bjarnat m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Bernhard. Bjarnat Krawc (German: Bernhard Schneider), born 1861, was a Sorbian conductor.
Bjedrich m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Friedrich.
Bjedruška f Sorbian
Upper Sorbian form of Friederike.
Bjela f Czech (Rare)
Derived from the old Slavic word белъ (belu) meaning "white". Cognate of Běla.
Bjenvinida f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Bienvenida.
Bjeranika f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Berenice.
Blagodat f Bulgarian (Rare)
Derived from Bulgarian благодат "blessing, benediction".
Blagomir m Bulgarian, Serbian, Croatian (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements blag "good, gentle, kind, blessed" and mir "peace".
Błagosław m Polish
Means "to beg for glory", derived from Polish błagać "to beg, to plead, to pray" combined with Slavic slav "glory".
Blahoslava f Czech (Rare)
Feminine form of Blahoslav.
Blanda f Ancient Roman, Polish
Feminine form of Blandus. Blanda is also the name of an ancient Roman city in southern Italy.
Blandyn m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Blandinus (compare Blandyna).
Blankica f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Blanka.
Blaža f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian short form of Blaženka and Slovene variant of Blažka.
Błażéj m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Blasius.
Błażeja f Polish
Feminine form of Błażej.
Błażek m Polish
Diminutive of Błażej.
Blažena f Slovene
Feminine form of Blaž.
Błažij m Sorbian
Upper Sorbian form of Blasius.
Blažka f Slovene
Feminine form of Blaž.
Blažo m Montenegrin, Serbian
Diminutive of Blagoje (also compare Blaž). A notable bearer of this name is the Montenegrin prime minister and president Blažo Jovanović (1907-1976).
Blazyj m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Blasius.
Blizbor m Polish (Archaic)
The name is composed of the elements bliz (close, near) and bor (fight; struggle). The designated nameday in Poland is January 28 and March 12.
Błogomił m Polish
Derived from Polish błogi "blessed, blissful" combined with Slavic mil "gracious, dear". As such, the meaning of this name is roughly "dear and blessed".
Błogomysł m Polish
Derived from Polish błogi "blessed, blissful" combined with Polish myśl "thought" (which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic mysliti "to think"). As such, the meaning of this name is roughly "blessed thought".
Błogosław m Polish
Derived from Polish błogi "blessed, blissful" combined with Slavic slav "glory". As such, the meaning of this name is roughly "blissful glory".
Bobana f Serbian
Feminine form of Boban.
Bobča f Czech
Diminutive form of Bohumila.
Bodan m South Slavic
The name Bodan is a name of South Slavic or possibly Germanic origin, it is a shortened form of the name Slobodan which is of Serbian origin and means Freedom. Alternatively it could derive from Proto-Germanic *butmaz (ground) via Proto-Indo-European *bʰudʰmḗn (bottom)
Bodin m Serbian (Rare), Medieval Serbian, History
Serbian king Constantine Bodin (fl. 1072–1108) was a ruler of Duklja, the second, although titular, King of Duklja and Dalmatia from 1081 to 1101, succeeding his father, King Michael.... [more]
Bogata m Russian
Means "wealthy" in Russian.
Bogdała f Polish
Feminine form of Bogdał.
Bògdana f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bogdana.
Bogdanica f Polish
Diminutive form of Bogdana.
Bogdanka f Slovene
Diminutive of Bogdana.
Bogdanŭ m Medieval Russian
Old East Slavic form of Bogdan.
Bògdón m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bogdan.
Bogica f Slovene
Feminine diminutive of Bogo.
Bogislaw m Polabian (?), Pomeranian
Polabian and Pomeranian form of Bogusław.
Bogodar m Medieval Polish
Composed of the members Bog ("God") and dar ("gift, present"). The name is considered to be equivalent in meaning to the name Adeodatus, and thus Bogodar celebrates its name-day on the days of St Adeodatus' memorial.
Bogoja m Macedonian, Serbian
The name is used in the Balkan countries Macedonia and Serbia. It is from the eastern orthodox church, from the South Slavic language. Dates back since 1926.
Bogoljub m Croatian, Serbian
Derived from Bog "God" and ljubiti ''to love".
Bogolyub m Bulgarian
From the Slavic elements богъ (bogu) meaning "God" and lyuby meaning "love".
Bogomierz m Polish
Polish form of Bogomir.
Bogomira f Slovene
Feminine form of Bogomir.
Bogoris m Medieval Slavic, Bulgar
Bulgar variant of Boris.
Bogoslav m Croatian
Croatian form of Bogusław.
Boguchna f Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish diminutive of Bogusława.
Boguchwał m Polish
Composed of the Slavic elements bogu "god" and chwal "to praise, to glorify". As such, the meaning of this name is "to praise God, to thank God".
Boguměr m Sorbian
Lower Sorbian cognate of Bohuměr. In former times, this name was usually Germanized as Gottfried.
Bògùmił m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bogumił.
Bogumila f Croatian
Feminine form of Bogumil.
Bogumilus m Polish (Latinized)
Latinized form of Bogumil, a famous bearer of this name was Bogumił Piotr who was Archbishop of Gniezno and also a hermit.
Bogured m Polish
Variant of Bogurad.
Boguś m Polish, Silesian
Diminutive of names beginning with Bog-, such as Bogdan, Bogumił, Bogumir and Bogusław.
Bogusąd m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish bóg "god", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic bogъ "god". The second element is derived from Polish sądzić "to judge" (also compare Croatian suditi and Czech soudit, both of which mean "to judge")... [more]
Bogusia f Polish
Diminutive of Bogdana, Bogumiła, and Bogusława.
Boguśka f Polish
Variant of Bogusia.
Bògùsłôw m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bogusław.
Bògùsz m Kashubian
Short form of names beginning with the element Bògù-, such as Bògùmił and Bògùsłôw.
Bogusza f Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish diminutive of Bogusława.
Boguszka f Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish diminutive of Bogusława.
Boguwłość f Polish
Polish name from Slavic bogŭ "god, deity" combined with volstĭ "power, rule, sovereignty". In Old Polish, the deuterotheme became włość "manor, estate".
Boguwola f Polish
Derived from the Slavic elements bogu "god" and wola "will".
Bohačesć m Sorbian (Archaic)
Derived from Upper Sorbian bóh "god" and česćić "to honour; to venerate, to revere". In former times, this name was usually Germanized as Ehregott.
Bohachwał m Sorbian (Archaic)
Derived from Upper Sorbian bóh and chwalić "to praise". In former times, this name was usually Germanized as Gottlob.
Bohča f Czech
Diminutive form of Bohumila.
Bohoľub m Slovak
Slovak translation of Gottlieb.
Bohuměr m Sorbian
Upper Sorbian form of Bohumír. In former times, this name was usually Germanized as Gottfried.
Bohuna f Czech (Rare)
Diminutive of Bohumila, rarely used as a given name in its own right.
Bohuš m Slovak
Diminutive of Bohuslav, used as a given name in its own right.
Bohuwěr m Sorbian
Derived from Upper Sorbian bóh "god" and wěra "faith". In former times, this name was usually Germanized as Traugott.
Boian m Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Боян (see Boyan).
Boiko m Bulgarian
Alternate transcription of Boyko.
Boja f Slovene
Short form of Bojana.
Bojanca f Slovene
Variant of Bojana.
Bojanka f Slovene
Originally a diminutive of Bojana, used as a given name in its own right.
Bojidara f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Bojidar.
Bojislav m Croatian (Rare), Czech (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements boji meaning "battle" and slava meaning "glory".
Bojomir m Polish
Derived from Slavic boj "battle, fight" combined with Slavic mir "peace", thus the name's meaning is something along the lines of "fighting for peace".
Boleczka f Polish
Diminutive form of Bolesława.
Bolemir m Medieval Polish
Derived from Slavic bole "large" combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Bolemira f Polish
Feminine form of Bolemir.
Bolemysł m Polish
Derived from Slavic bole "large" combined with Polish myśl "thought" (which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic mysliti "to think").
Bòlesk m Kashubian
Diminutive of Bòlesłôw.
Boleslaus m Medieval Czech (Latinized)
Latinized form of Boleslav. Boleslaus was the brother of Duke Wenceslaus of Bohemia (the inspiration for the Christmas carol) and became notorious for his murder.
Bòlesłôw m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bolesław.
Bolka f Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish short form of Bolesława. Princess Bolka (1352 - 1427/1428) was the last representative of the Bytom-Koziel Piasts.
Bolko m Polish
Diminutive of Bolesław.
Bolta m Croatian (Rare)
Variant form of Bolto.
Bolto m Croatian
Croatian short form of Baltazar, cognate of Slovene Boltežar and Hungarian Boldizsár.
Boluś m Polish
Diminutive of Bolesław.
Bolzhedor m Soviet, Russian (Rare, Archaic)
An early soviet name created from russian phrase "Большая железная дорога", which means "Big railroad".
Bona f Theatre, Medieval Italian, Polish, Corsican (Archaic)
Possibly derived from Latin bonus, -a, -um meaning "good, kind, pleasant, right, honest, brave, noble; valid, useful, healthy". This was the name of a 12th-century Italian saint... [more]
Bònaweńtura m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Bonaventura.
Bonawentura m Polish
Polish form of Bonaventura.
Bonči f Bosnian (Archaic)
Diminutive of Bona.
Bończa m Polish (Archaic)
Old Polish form of Bonifacy.
Bonifácia f Hungarian, Slovak
Hungarian and Slovak feminine form of Boniface. In Hungarian history, this name was borne by Erzsébet Bonifácia (born and died 1399), the short-lived daughter of Jadwiga I, Queen of Poland (sister of Mária/Marija I, Queen of Hungary and Croatia) and Vladislavas Jogaila, Grand Duke of Lithuania (later Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland); the princess was named for her godfather Pope Boniface IX.
Bonifacija f Slovene, Croatian (Rare), Lithuanian (Rare)
Slovenian and Lithuanian feminine form of Bonifatius. In Lithuanian history, this name was borne by Elžbieta Bonifacija (born and died 1399), the short-lived daughter of Jadwiga I, Queen of Poland and Vladislavas Jogaila, Grand Duke of Lithuania (later Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland); the princess was named for her godfather Pope Boniface IX.
Bonifacja f Polish
Feminine form of Bonifacy. This name was borne by Elżbieta Bonifacja (born and died 1399), the short-lived daughter of Jadwiga I, Queen of Poland and Vladislavas Jogaila, Grand Duke of Lithuania (later Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland); the princess was named for her godfather Pope Boniface IX.
Bonifacuś m Polish
Diminutive of Bonifacy.
Bonifatiy m Russian
Variant form of Bonifatsiy. A known bearer of this name was the Soviet philosopher Bonifaty Kedrov (1903-1985). In his case, Bonifaty is just a variant transcription of Bonifatiy: the spelling is exactly the same in Russian, so they are really the same name.
Bonifatsiy m Russian
Russian form of Bonifatius (see Boniface).
Bonka f Medieval Slavic, Medieval Czech
Medieval Czech diminutive of Bona.
Bono m Croatian (Rare)
Croatian form of Bonus.
Bôra f Kashubian
Diminutive of Barbara.
Bora f Slovene
Feminine form of Bor.
Borbora f Sorbian
Sorbian form of Barbara.
Boriana f Bulgarian, Albanian
Variant transliteration of Bulgarian Боряна (see Boryana).
Boril m Bulgarian
Boril of Bulgaria was the emperor of Bulgaria from 1207 to 1218.
Borimir m Bulgarian, Croatian, Serbian
Derived from Slavic bor "battle" combined with Slavic mir "peace". A known bearer of this name is Borimir Perković (b. 1967), a former Croatian soccer player.
Bòris m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Boris.
Borisa f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Boris.
Borissa f Bulgarian
Variant of Borisa.
Borjan m Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian
Derived from the Slavic element bor "battle". Notable bearer is Macedonian conductor Borjan Canev (born 1973).
Borka f Serbian, Croatian
Feminine form of Borko.
Borka f Slovene
Feminine form of Bor via the form Bora.
Boromea f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Boromeusz.
Boromeusz m Polish (Rare)
Derived from the surname of Catholic saint Charles Borromeo, known as Karol Boromeusz in Polish.
Boryana f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Boryan.
Boryslav m Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Borislav. Meaning interpreted usually as "fight for glory!".
Bòrzësłôw m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Borzysław.
Borzygniew m Polish
Composed of members of borzy ("to fight") and gniew ("anger"). It could mean "the one who fights in anger."
Borzymir m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Borimir.
Borzysław m Polish
Polish form of Borislav.
Borzysława f Polish
Feminine form of Borzysław.
Bosanka f Bosnian (Rare)
means "Bosnian woman"
Bosćan m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Sebastian.
Bosćij m Sorbian
Sorbian form of Sebastian.
Bosiljka f Croatian, Serbian
Derived from bosiljak, Croatian and Serbian name for the herb "basil" (Ocimum basilicum), ultimately from Greek basileus meaning "king".
Bosiljko m Croatian
Male form of Bosiljka.
Bosilka f Bulgarian
Derived from Bulgarian босилек "basil".
Bosko m Sorbian
Diminutive of Bosćij.
Boskosław m Polish
Means "divine glory", derived from Polish boski "divine, god-like, heavenly" combined with Slavic slav "glory".
Boštjana f Slovene
Feminine form of Boštjan.
Bôsza f Kashubian
Diminutive of Barbara.
Boulat m Russian
French transcription of Bulat.