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.
Čudomir m Croatian (Archaic)
Derived from Serbo-Croatian čudo "miracle, wonder" combined with Slavic mir "peace". As such, the name roughly means "miracle of peace" or "peace is a miracle". In some instances, this name is mistaken for a variant form of Čedomir and even Godemir.
Cvetana f Croatian (Rare), Serbian, Bulgarian, Slovene
Cognate of Cvitana and Bulgarian variant transcription of Tsvetana.
Cvetelina f Bulgarian
Alternate transcription of Tsvetelina.
Cvetomir m Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Tsvetomir.
Cvijetka f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvijetko.
Cvijetko m Croatian
Croatian alternative form of Cvetko.
Cvitana f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvitan.
Cvitka f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Cvitko.
Cvjetislav m Croatian (Rare)
Derived from Croatian cvijet meaning "blossom, flower" and slava "glory".
Cvjetko m Croatian, Serbian
Croatian variant of Cvetko.
Cycylija f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Cecelia
Cyd m Kashubian
Diminutive of Placyd.
Cyda f Kashubian
Diminutive of Placëda.
Cyl m Kashubian
Diminutive of Celestin.
Cyla f Kashubian
Diminutive of Cecyliô, Celestina and Celina.
Cymbarka f Medieval Polish
Polish form of Cyneburg. Cymbarka was the daughter of Mazovian prince Siemowit IV.
Cynta f Polish
Diminutive form of Hiacynta.
Cyntek m Polish
Diminutive form of Hiacynt.
Cyntia f Polish
Polish form of Cynthia.
Cypek m Polish
Diminutive of Cyprian.
Cyppora f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Zipporah.
Cyprián m Slovak
Slovak form of Cyprian.
Cyprión m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Cyprian.
Cypryjan m Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish form of Cyprian.
Cyrek m Polish
Diminutive of Cyryl.
Cyriak m Czech, Polish (Rare), Slovak
Czech, Polish and Slovak form of Cyriacus.
Cyriaka f Polish
Polish form of Cyriaca.
Cyryk m Polish (Archaic)
Polish form of Cyricus.
Cyryla f Polish
Feminine form of Cyryl.
Cyrylla f Polish
Variant of Cyryla.
Cyryna f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Cyryn.
Cysia f Polish
Short form of Marcysia.
Cytka f Polish
Diminutive of Placyda.
Cyzia f Polish
Diminutive of Narcyza.
Czarek m Polish
Diminutive of Cezary.
Czaruś m Polish
Diminutive of Cezary.
Czasław m Polish
Variant of Czesław.
Czcibora f Polish
Feminine form of Czcibor.
Czcimir m Polish
Polish form of Chestimir.
Czębira f Medieval Polish
Of uncertain origin and meaning.
Czedomir m Polish
Polish form of Čedomir.
Czerniczsche f Medieval Jewish, Judeo-Slavic (?)
The older form of Czarna (See Charna)
Czesbor m Polish
Variant of Czcibor.
Czesia f Polish
Diminutive of Czesława.
Czesiek m Polish
Diminutive of Czesław.
Czesio m Polish
Diminutive of Czesław.
Cześka f Polish
Diminutive of Czesława.
Czesłôw m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Czesław.
Częstobor m Polish
Means "to fight often", derived from Slavic częs(to) "often" combined with Slavic bor "battle" or borit "to fight". Also compare Chestibor.
Częstobrona f Polish
Derived from Polish często "often" and bronić "to protect someone" or bronić się "to defend oneself".
Częstomir m Polish
Derived from Slavic częs(to) "often" combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Częstorka f Polish
Diminutive form of Częstobrona.
Częstowoj m Medieval Polish
Derived from często "often" and Old Polish woj, wojownik in modern Polish, "warrior".
Czeszka f Kashubian
Kashubian diminutive of Czesława.
Czôrk m Kashubian
Diminutive of Cezari via Cezôrk.
Czścibor m Polish
Variant of Czcibor.
Czudomir m Polish
Polish form of Čudomir.
Dąbrówka f Polish
Polish form of Doubravka. This name was borne by the wife of Mieszko I of Poland.
Dabus m Montenegrin (Archaic)
Recorded in Montenegro in the early 1600s.
Dacjan m Polish
Polish form of Dacian.
Dacjusz m Polish
Polish form of Dacius.
Dadzboga f Medieval Polish
Feminine form of Dadzbog.
Dafo m Bulgarian
Nickname for David. Dafo Trendafilov, a famous Bulgarian bagpipe (gaida) player.
Dafroza f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Dafrosa.
Daga f Kashubian, Polish
Diminutive of Dagmara.
Dagna f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Dagny.
Dajan m Croatian, Bosnian
Masculine form to Dajana.
Dalebor m Old Church Slavic, Medieval Czech, Polish
Slavic masculine name, composed of the name elements dalĭ "far, distant; to move away" and borti "fight, battle".
Dalebora f Polish
Feminine form of Dalebor.
Dalek m Slovak
Means “far away” in Slovak.
Dalemił m Polish
Polish form of Dalimil.
Dalemir m Polish
Polish form of Dalimir.
Dalewin m Polish (Rare)
An old Polish masculine name, composed of two parts: Dale- "far away", and -win, meaning "uncle". Therefore it means "one whose uncle is far away", "one whose mother's family is far away".
Dalewuja f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalewin.
Dália f Hungarian, Slovak (Rare)
Hungarian and Slovak form of Dahlia.
Dalida f Macedonian
Biblical name.
Dalimila f Czech (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalimil.
Dalimír m Slovak
Slovak form of Dalimir. A known bearer of this name is Dalimír Jančovič, a Slovakian professional ice hockey player.
Dalimir m Croatian, Polish, Serbian
Derived from Slavic dal "far away" combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Dalmatsiy m Russian
Russian form of Dalmatius.
Dalmira f Kazakh, Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalmir.
Daluše f Czech
Diminutive of Dahlia, not used as a given name in its own right.
Damasiy m Russian, Ukrainian
Russian and Ukrainian form of Damasos.
Damaz m Croatian
Croatian form of Damasus.
Damazy m Polish
Polish form of Damasus.
Damek m Czech
Czech diminutive of Adam and Damián, not used as a given name in its own right.
Damilka f South Slavic, English
It derives from the slavic form of Damian, name that means "tamer" and the diminutive suffix -lka
Daminik m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Dominic.
Daminika f Belarusian
Feminine form of Daminik.
Damión m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Damian.
Damir m Tatar, Russian, Soviet
Soviet-era name based on the Russian phrase Да здравствует мировая революция! (Da zdravstvuyet mirovaya revolyutsiya!) meaning "Long live world revolution!", referring to the Marxist concept of world revolution.
Damirka f Croatian
Feminine form of Damir.
Damisia f Belarusian
Diminutive of Daminika.
Damroka f Medieval Polish
Recorded in medieval Pomerania and Kashubia, this name is of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a Kashubian dialectical form of Dąbrówka... [more]
Damyana f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Damyan.
Dana f Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian, Montenegrin
Shortened form of the name Danica, meaning the planet Venus, symbol of dawn and beauty. “Dan” means day.
Dana f & m Sorbian, Polish, Hungarian
Feminine short form of Danuta, Danisława, Bohdana and Danijela or Daniella and masculine short form of Danijel.
Dana f Slavic Mythology
Dana is a rusalka in Slavic Mythology.
Danaé f Czech, German (Rare), Italian, French
Czech, German, Italian and French form of Danaë.
Danaila f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Danail.
Danaj m Croatian, Serbian
Croatian and Serbian form of Danaos (also see Danaus).
Danaja f Slovene, Croatian (Rare), Serbian (Rare)
Croatian, Serbian and Slovene form of Danaë.
Danay m Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Danaos (also see Danaus).
Danaya f Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Danaë.
Danča f Czech
Diminutive form of Daniela.
Dancia f Polish
Diminutive of Dana.
Dančyk m Belarusian
Diminutive of Bahdan.
Dane m Serbian (Modern, Rare)
Is the short form for Daniel,Danijel in serbia bosnia etc.. people Who are called Daniel uses the short variant Dane,Danko. Most used in ex Yougoslavia.
Dane m Serbian
DANE is the short form of DANIJEL,DANIEL IS SERBIAN by origine it is MOST USED BY SERBS AND BOSNIAKS WHO ARE NAMED DANIJEL meaning, GOD IS MY JUDGE.... [more]
Daneczka f Polish
Diminutive form of Danuta.
Đani m Croatian
Croatian form of Gianni.... [more]
Danička f Czech (Rare)
Diminutive of Dana 1.
Daniél m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Daniel.
Danielka f Czech, Slovak, Polish, Bulgarian, Macedonian
Diminutive of Daniela (compare Polish and Czech Irenka).
Daniiela f Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Danielle.
Daniila f Russian
Feminine form of Daniil.
Danijar m Bosnian (Rare), Kazakh (Rare)
Bosnian form and Kazakh variant transcription of Daniyar.
Danila f Slovene, Sicilian, Hungarian
Feminine form of Danilo.
Danilka f Croatian, Serbian
Feminine form of Danilo.
Danilko m Croatian (Rare)
An elaboration of Danilo.
Danimir m Croatian, Serbian
The first element of this name is derived from Serbo-Croatian dan "day", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьnь "day". The second element is derived from Slavic mir "peace"... [more]
Danir m Bosnian
Bosnian male form of Danira.
Danira f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Deïanira.
Danislav m Croatian, Serbian
The first element of this name is derived from Serbo-Croatian dan "day", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьnь "day". The second element is derived from Slavic slav "glory"... [more]
Danisława f Polish
Polish form of Danislava.
Danisz m Polish
Medieval Polish hypochoristic form of Donatus
Danjela f Slovene, Albanian
Slovene variant of Danijela and Albanian variant of Daniela.
Danuchna f Polish
Diminutive of Danuta.
Danuša f Croatian, Czech, Slovak, Slovene
Diminutive of Danica (Slovene), Daniela (Czech and Slovak) and Danijela (Croatian)... [more]
Danusia f Polish
Diminutive of Danuta.
Danuśka f Polish
Diminutive of Danuta.
Danuška f Croatian, Slovak, Slovene
Diminutive of Danica (Slovene), Daniela ( Slovak) and Danijela (Croatian). Also compare Danuša.
Danya f Ukrainian, Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Darya 1 or Daryna (Darina 2 in Russian).
Danya m Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Danila 1 and Daniil in Russian and Danylo and Danyil in Ukrainian.
Danylko m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Danylo.
Dara f Slovene, Croatian
Short form of Darinka.
Dara f Ukrainian
Short form of Dariya.
Darafiej m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Dorotheos (see Dorothea).
Darafieja f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Dorothea.
Darča f Czech
Diminutive form of Darina 2.
Dardan m Serbian
Dar is serbian for "Gift" and Dan for "Day" Gift of the day.The name of the Dardani, an Illyrian tribe who lived on the Balkan Peninsula. Their name may derive from an Illyrian word meaning "pear".
Dardanosz m Polish
Polish form of Dardanos.
Dare m Macedonian, Serbian, Slovene
Short form of masculine names that contain the Slavic element daru meaning "gift" (compare Darko).... [more]
Darena f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Daren.
Darga f Kashubian
Diminutive of Dargòmira.
Dargòmira f Kashubian
Kashubian cognate of Dragomira.
Dari m Russian
Variant transcription of Dariy.
Dária f Hungarian, Slovak
Feminine form of Dárius.
Darian m Bulgarian, Croatian, German (Modern), Slovene, French (Modern)
Derived from Slavic dar, meaning "gift". It is sometimes also considered a derivative of Darius.
Dariia f Ukrainian
Variant transliteration of Дарія (see Dariya).
Darijan m Slovene, Croatian
An elaboration of Darijo.
Darije m Croatian, Serbian
Croatian and Serbian form of Darius.
Darin m Bulgarian
Masculine form of Darina 2.
Darinko m Croatian
Croatian male form of Darinka.
Dariô f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Daria.
Dárius m Slovak, Hungarian
Slovak and Hungarian form of Darius.
Dariushka f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1.
Dariyka f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Dariya.
Darjan m Croatian, Serbian
Either a form of Darian or a derivative of the Slavic element dar meaning "gift".
Darka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Dariô.
Darka f Serbian (Rare), Croatian, Slovene
Either a feminine form of Darko or a short form of other feminine dar- names like Darinka or, as some sources suggest, even Darija.
Darka f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Dariya.
Darlena f Polish (Modern, Rare), English (American)
English variant and Polish borrowing of Darlene.
Daromila f Medieval Russian
Meaning "dear gift".
Daromir m Bulgarian, Croatian, Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic dar "gift, present", which in turn is derived from Proto-Slavic darъ "gift, present". Compare modern Polish darować "to donate, to gift" and Czech darovat "to donate, to give", as well as Proto-Slavic dati "to give"... [more]
Daroška m Belarusian
Diminutive of Darafiej.
Daroslav m Croatian, Lithuanian, Serbian
The first element of this name is derived from Slavic dar "gift, present", which in turn is derived from Proto-Slavic darъ "gift, present". Compare modern Polish darować "to donate, to gift" and Czech darovat "to donate, to give", as well as Proto-Slavic dati "to give"... [more]
Darosław m Polish
Polish form of Daroslav.
Darunya f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not ususally used as a given name in its own right.
Daruś m Polish
Diminutive of Dariusz.
Dary m Russian
Variant transcription of Dariy.
Daryj m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Darius.
Daryona f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not usually used as a given name in its own right.
Daryusha f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not usually used as a given name in its own right.
Daryushka f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not usually used as a given name in its own right.
Darzymir m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish darzyć "to bestow, to grant, to endow", which is ultimately derived from Slavic dar "gift, present" (which in turn is derived from Proto-Slavic darъ "gift, present")... [more]
Darzysław m Polish
The first element of this name is derived from Polish darzyć "to bestow, to grant, to endow", which is ultimately derived from Slavic dar "gift, present" (which in turn is derived from Proto-Slavic darъ "gift, present")... [more]
Daša f Slovene, Croatian
Variant of Dasha.
Dascha f Russian, Ukrainian, Dutch (Rare), German (Rare)
Variant transcription of Dasha (for Russia and the Ukraine) as well as the main form of Dasha in Germany and the Netherlands.... [more]
Dasdrapertrak m Soviet, Russian
Variant transcription of Dazdrapertrak. This name was used by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Dášeňka f Czech, Slovak
Variant spelling of Dašenka. Used by Czech writer Karel Čapek in his book Dášeňka čili život štěněte (Dashenka, or the Life of a Puppy, 1933).
Dašenka f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Daša.
Dashenka f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1.
Dashik f Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Darya 1. See also Dasha.
Dashka f Russian
Variant of Dasha.
Dashulia f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not usually used as a given name in its own right.
Dashulya f Russian
Variant transliteration of Дашуля (see Dashulia).
Dashunia f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1, not usually used as a given name in its own right.
Dashunya f Russian
Variant transliteration of Дашуня (see Dashunia).
Dasia f Russian (?)
Variant of Dasha.
Dasiy m Ukrainian, Russian
Ukrainian and Russian form of Dasius.
Daška f Slovene, Croatian
Diminutive of Daša.
Datsko m Medieval Ukrainian, Ukrainian (Rare)
Diminutive or vernacular form of an unknown name. There were 147 cossacks with this name in 1649 Zaporozhian Army register.... [more]
Davidko m Bulgarian, Vlach
Bulgarian and Vlach diminutive of David.
Davorina f Slovene
Feminine form of Davorin.
Davorinka f Slovene
Diminutive of Davorina.
Davorko m Croatian
Derived from Davor.
Dawida f Polish
Feminine form of Dawid.
Dawidek m Polish
Diminutive of Dawid.
Dawyd m Medieval Russian, Medieval Ukrainian
Medieval Russian and Medieval Ukrainian form of David. Dawyd Igorjewitsch (usually transcribed as Davyd Igorevich in English), the Prince of Volyn (1086–1099), was the son of Igor Yaroslavich and grandson of Yaroslav the Wise from the Rurikid dynasty of Kievan Rus’.
Dazdrapertrak m Soviet, Russian (Archaic)
Contraction of Russian Да здравствует первый трактор! (Da zdravstvuet pervyy traktor!) meaning "Long live the first tractor!" This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names... [more]
Dazdrapertrakt m Soviet, Russian
Variant of Dazdrapertrak. This name was used by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Dazmir m Soviet, Russian (Rare), Georgian (Rare)
Contraction of the Soviet slogan Да здравствует мировая революция! (Da zdravstvuet mirovaya revolyutsiya!) meaning "Long live the world revolution!" as well as of Да здравствует мир! (Da zdravstvuet mir!) meaning "Long live the peace!" This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Dazmira f Soviet, Russian (Rare), Georgian (Rare)
Feminine form of Dazmir. This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names.
Dea f Danish, Swedish, Croatian, Slovene, English, Albanian, Italian
Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from Latin dea "goddess" and a short form of Dorotea, Andrea 2 and Desideria... [more]
Deana f Slovene
Elaboration of Dea and variant of Dejana.
Dedal m Croatian, Polish, Romanian
Croatian, Polish and Romanian form of Daedalus.
Dedomir m Medieval Slavic
The first element of this name is probably derived from Old Church Slavonic dědŭ "grandfather", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dědъ "grandfather". The second element is derived from Slavic mir "peace"... [more]
Dedor m Russian
Russian form of Diodoros (see Diodorus).
Dedoslav m Medieval Slavic
The first element of this name is probably derived from Old Church Slavonic dědŭ "grandfather", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dědъ "grandfather". The second element is derived from Slavic slav "glory"... [more]
Deiana f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Деяна (see Deyana).
Deifob m Russian (Rare), Bulgarian (Rare), Ukrainian (Rare), Serbian (Rare)
Russian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian and Serbian form of Deiphobus.
Deifobos m Romanian (Rare), Polish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare)
Romanian, Polish and Norwegian form of Deiphobus.
Deja f Slovene
Variant of Dea.
Dejanira f Greek Mythology (Latinized), Polish, Portuguese
Variant transcription of Deianira. This was the form used for the main belt asteroid 157 Dejanira (discovered in 1875 by French astronomer Alphonse Borrelly).
Dekabrin m Soviet, Russian
Derived from Russian декабрь (dekabr) meaning "December". This name was created by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names, and was used in order to commemorate the Decembrist revolt of 1825... [more]
Dekabrina f Soviet, Russian
Feminine form of Dekabrin. A known bearer of this name was the Russian chess player Dekabrina Kazatsker (1913-1983).
Dekabrist m Soviet, Russian
Derived from Russian декабрист (dekabrist) meaning "Decembrist", which is a term used to refer to someone who participated in (or sympathized with) the Decembrist revolt of 1825. This name was used by Communist parents who were eager to reject traditional names... [more]
Deksip m Bulgarian, Croatian
Bulgarian and Croatian form of Dexippos via its latinized form Dexippus.
Deksipp m Russian
Russian form of Dexippos.
Déla f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adéla.
Delfa f Polish
Diminutive form of Delfina.
Delfin m Polish
Polish form of Delphinus.
Deliana f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Деляна (see Delyana).
Delica f Slovene
Diminutive form of Adela.
Delisja f Bosnian (Archaic)
Derived from Spanish delicia "delight, pleasure".
Deljana f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Деляна (see Delyana).
Délka f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adélka.
Delko m Croatian (Rare), Bulgarian (Rare), Serbian (Rare)
Derived from Slavic delati meaning ''to work''.
Đelo m Bosnian
Nickname for Đevalhudin.
Delyan m History, Bulgarian
Means "business, work" from Old Church Slavonic дѣлати (dělati) "to work, to do". A famous bearer was Peter II (Delyan), a Tsar of Bulgaria.
Delyana f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Delyan.
Dementiy m Russian
Possibly a Russian variant of Dometius via Georgian Domenti.
Demian m Literature, German (Modern, Rare), Dutch, Ukrainian (Polonized)
German variant of Damian (via the Ukrainian form Demyan). Since the 1980s, it has been in occasional use in German-speaking countries.... [more]
Đemila f Bosnian
Variant of Džemila.
Démk m Kashubian
Diminutive of Nikòdém.
Demko m Ukrainian
Diminutive or older folk form of Demyan.
Demofil m Croatian, Macedonian, Russian
Croatian, Macedonian and Russian form of Demophilos.
Demofon m Polish
Polish form of Demophon.
Demokrit m Bosnian (Rare), Croatian (Rare)
Bosnian and Croatian form of Democritus.
Demokryt m Polish
Polish form of Democritus.
Demyd m Ukrainian (Archaic)
Ukrainian form of Diomedes.
Denča f Czech
Diminutive form of Denisa.
Deni f Bulgarian
Possibly a short form of Denica.
Deniska m Russian
Russian diminutive of Denis.
Denislav m Bulgarian
The first element of this name is derived from Bulgarian den "day", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic dьnь "day". The second element is derived from Slavic slav "glory"... [more]
Denislava f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Denislav.
Denitza f Bulgarian
Variant transliteration of Деница (see Denica).