Submitted Names of Length 4

This is a list of submitted names in which the length is 4.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aabo m Estonian
Variant of Aapo.
Aabu m Finnish
Variant of Aabo.
Aach f West Frisian
Diminutive of Agathe, as well as names that begin with agi meaning "sword".
Aade f Estonian
Of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from Estonian aade "idea, thought" (compare the Finnish masculine name Aate).
Aadi m Estonian
Estonian form of Adolf.
Aadi m Indian
Means "first, most important" in Sanskrit. It can also be used as a diminutive of Aditya.
Aado m Estonian
Estonian short form of Adam or Adolf.
Aadu m Estonian
Originally a vernacular form of Aadolf and Aadam, now used as a given name in its own right.
Aagi m Old Swedish
Variant of Aaghe.
Aaja f Greenlandic
From Greenlandic -aaja, an affix used for and by children used as a name.
Aaju m & f Greenlandic
From a childish pronunciation of the Greenlandic word angaju "older sibling of the same sex" (see Angaju).
Aakä m Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Åke.
Aåke m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Aake.
Aake m & f Finnish
Finnish diminutive of many names with the ak sound, both masculine and feminine ones.
Aako m Old Swedish
Variant of Aake.
Aaku m Finnish
Variant of Aake.
Aala f Finnish
Variant of Aale.
Aale f Estonian
Estonian form of Alla and Estonian diminutive of Rosalia.
Aale m Old Swedish, Finnish
Old Swedish short form of names beginning with Al- and Finnish diminutive of Aarne or Arvid.
Aale m & f East Frisian
Variant of Ale 2 recorded in the 18th century for men and in the 17th and 18th centuries for women in East Frisia.
Aalf m Dutch (Rare), West Frisian (Rare), East Frisian
Dutch short form of Adolf and West Frisian short form of Alef and Alof, which are both Frisian variants of Adolf.
Aalf m Old Swedish
Variant of Alf 1.
Aali f Estonian, Finnish
Variant of Aale 1.
Aali m Finnish
Variant of Aale 2.
Aali m Greenlandic
Younger spelling of Âle.
Aalu f Finnish
Variant of Aale
Aaly m Kyrgyz
Kyrgyz form of Ali 1.
Aana f Finnish
Finnish form of Anna.
Aane m Norwegian (Rare)
Form of Åne, a variant of either Ånund, Ånje 2, or Áni.
Aang m Sundanese
Means "older brother" in Sundanese.
Aani f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Âne
Aapa m Finnish
Variant of Ape.
Aapi m Finnish
Variant of Ape 2.
Aaqa f Greenlandic
Younger form of Âĸa.
Aara f & m Arabic
Means "one who adorns, beautifier" in Arabic.
Aara f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Marathi, Nepali, Gujarati, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu
Means "saw, awl, shoemaker's knife" in Sanskrit.
Aare m Estonian
Derived from Estonian aare "treasure" and cognate of Finnish Aarre.
Aare m Yoruba
Means "commander" in Yoruba. Aàrẹ is a title, usually in the military of the Yoruba warriors company. The leader of the company from a clan takes the title when they join up with a coalition.
Aaró m Catalan (Rare)
Catalan form of Aaron.
Aasa f Estonian
Commonly derived from Estonian aas "meadow", this name might have originally been a variant of Aase.
Aasu m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Âso.
Aata m & f Tahitian
Means "happy moonchild" in Tahitian.
Aate m Finnish
Means "thought" or "ideology" in Finnish. It is also used as a short form of Aatami and Aadolf.
Aato m Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 亜 (a) meaning "second, Asia", 々 used to duplicate 亜 combined with 人 (to) meaning "person", 斗 (to), which refers to a Chinese constellation or 都 (to) meaning "metropolis, capital, all, everything"... [more]
Aaue f Manx
Manx form of Eve via Old Irish Eua.
Aava f Hebrew (Rare)
Variant transcription of Ahava.
Aave m & f Finnish
Means "ghost" in Finnish.
Aavi m & f Finnish
Variant of Aave.
Aavo m Estonian
Originally s short form of Avraham, now used as a given name in its own right.
Aayu m Hindi
A Hindu name meaning “long life”. It is a variant of Aayush and Aayushi.
A'azz m Arabic
From Arabic أعزّ ('aʿazz) meaning "mightiest; strongest".
Aazz m Arabic
Variant transcription of A'azz.
Abád m Medieval Hungarian
Diminutive of Aba.
Abad m Spanish (Rare)
From Spanish abad "abbot", after saint Anthony the Great (known in Spanish as san Antonio Abad, "saint Anthony the Abbot"). This name is often given as the compound name Antonio Abad.
Abai m & f Manchu
'Abal f Arabic
Variant transcription of Abal.
Ábal m Faroese
Faroese form of Abel.
Abal f Arabic
Means "wild rose" in Arabic.
Abam f African
Abam’s meaning is “second child after twins”
Aban m Persian Mythology, Persian
Means "October" in Persian. In Persian mythology, this is also the name of the Angel of October.
Aban m & f Medieval Arabic (Moorish), Arabic
Means "clear, lucid, eloquent" in Arabic.
Abas m Arabic, Indonesian, Malay, Bosnian
Alternate transcription of Arabic عباس (see Abbas), as well as the Indonesian, Malay and Bosnian form.
Abas m Lithuanian
Short form of names beginning with Ab, such as Abdonas, Abromas and Abelis.
Abas m Armenian
Armenian form of Abbas.
Abas m Ancient Greek
Unknown etymology.
Abay m Kazakh
Means "careful, cautious, wary" in Kazakh.
Abba m Ancient Aramaic, Hebrew, Jewish
Derived from Aramaic אבא (’abā’) meaning "father", which is ultimately derived from Proto-Semitic ʾab meaning "father".
Abba f Afro-American (Slavery-era)
Short form of Abena. This was used by early slaves in the American south.
Abba f Medieval French
Feminine form of Abbo.
Abbe m Swedish
Diminutive of Abraham, Albin and Albert.
Abbe f English (American)
Alternate spelling of Abby.
Abbo m Germanic, Medieval Dutch, Medieval German, Medieval French, Frisian, Finnish
Either from Proto-Germanic *abô meaning "husband, man", or a diminutive of Alberich and other names beginning with Old High German alb "elf", as well as a Frisian diminutive of Old High German names beginning with the element adal "noble" and a second element beginning with b (compare Abe 2)... [more]
Abbo m Gaulish
Derived from Gaulish *abona "river".
Abda m Arabic
Means "Servant" in Arabic.
Abda m Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Abdon.
Abdi m Arabic, Indonesian, Turkish, Persian
Derived from Arabic عبد ('abd) meaning "servant".
Abdu m Swahili
Abdu is a name of Swahili origin meaning worshipper of God and the vowel at the end makes it sound like Abdul
Abed m Arabic
Derived from Arabic عبد ('abd) meaning "servant". It is also sometimes used as an alternate transcription of the name Abid.
Abèl m Lengadocian, Provençal, Gascon, Haitian Creole
Languedocian, Provençal, Gascon and Haitian Creole form of Abel.
Abel f Swedish (Archaic)
Short form of Abela.
Abel f German (Archaic)
Short version of Appollonia, Alberta or a version of Abelina.
Abel m Frisian
Short version of Albrecht.
Aben m Medieval Arabic (Moorish)
Derived from Arabic اِبْن (ibn), meaning "son".
Aber f & m Alur
Means "I'm better" or "I'm good" in Alur language.
Abga m Abkhaz (Rare)
Derived from Abkhaz абгаду (ābgādú) meaning "wolf".
Abhi m Hindi
Means "now" in Hindi.
Abia f Arabic
Means "my father" in Arabic.
Abid f Persian
Means "flame" in Persian.
Abid m Arabic, Urdu, Bengali, Bosnian, Azerbaijani
Means "admirer, adorer, worshipper" in Arabic, from the root عبد (ʿabada) meaning "to worship, to be devoted to".
Abil m Indian
Indian form of Abel.
Åbin m Walloon
Walloon form of Aubin.
Abir m Hebrew
Means "strong, mighty" in Hebrew (compare Adir), derived from the root of אבר (ʿabar) "to strive upward, mount, soar, fly" (allegedly the name also means "aroma"; cf... [more]
Abir m Indian, Bengali
From Hindi अबीर (abīr) referring to a type of coloured powder used during the Holi festival. The word itself is ultimately derived from Arabic عَبِير‎ (ʿabīr) meaning "scent, perfume".
Abis m Lithuanian (Rare)
Short form of names beginning with Ab, such as Abdonas, Abromas and Abelis.
Abiy m Amharic
Means "father's joy" in Amharic.
Abiy f Karachay-Balkar
Possibly a diminutive of Abida.
Abje m East Frisian
Variant of Abbe with the diminutive suffix -je recorded in the 18th century in East Frisia.
Able m English (American, Rare)
Either a variant of Abel, or from the English word able, "having the power, skill, means, or opportunity to do something", ultimately from Latin habere "to hold".
Abos m Medieval Hungarian
Diminutive of Aba.
Abra f Ewe
Means "Tuesday-born girl" in Ewe.
Abra f History, Literature
Possibly a feminine form of Abraham. It coincides with a Latin word meaning "maid". A known bearer was Saint Abra of Poitiers, a Gallo-Roman nun of the 4th century.
Absa m Hungarian
Diminutive of Absolon.
Abuk f African Mythology, Dinka
In Dinka mythology (south Sudan), the first woman. She is the patron goddess of women and gardens. Her emblem is a little snake. She is the mother of Deng (Danka).
Abul m Arabic, Afghan, Pakistani, Urdu
Means "father of the" in Arabic, derived from Arabic أبو (abu) meaning "father of" (see Abu) combined with Arabic ال (al) meaning "the". Also compare names like Abul-Fazl.... [more]
Abuy m Romani (Archaic)
Diminutive of Abraham.
Abye m Ge'ez
Means "big, large" in Ge'ez.
Abyl m Kazakh
Kazakh form of Abul. This name is also frequently used as a short form of Abylay.
Acai m & f English (Modern, Rare)
From the name of the Açaí palm; derived from Old Tupi asa'y or ybasa'y, meaning "fruit that expels water".
Acan m Mayan Mythology
Means "groan". This is the name of the Mayan God of wine and celebration.
Acan f & m Alur
Means "I suffer" in Alur language. The name may be given to a child born when the parents were experiencing poverty or suffering.
Acar f & m Turkish
Means "fearless" or "clever" in Turkish.
Acar m Ancient Aramaic
One who troubles.
Acca f Roman Mythology
In Roman legend this was another name of Larentia, the foster mother of the twins Romulus and Remus, and wife of the shepherd Faustulus... [more]
Acca f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Form of Rebecca used by Malayalam-speaking Saint Thomas Christians.
Acco m Gaulish, History
Derived from Gaulish *acu- "swift, quick, fast". Acco was a chief of the Senones in Gaul, who induced his countrymen to revolt against Julius Caesar in 53 BC.
Acco m Medieval German
Diminutive of names containing Proto-Germanic *agio "blade".
Acel f Filipino
The name of the Philippine singer Acel Bisa-Van Ommen. It was probably created from her full given name Maria Cecilia.
Acep m Sundanese
Variant of Asep.
Acer m Jewish
Medieval variant of Asher.
Acha f Pictish, Anglo-Saxon, Medieval Scottish
The name of a Deiran princess who later married king Æðelfrið of Bernicia.
Achi m Hebrew (Rare)
Means "my brother" in Hebrew.
Achi m Georgian
Short form of Archil and/or its diminutive Achiko.
Acho m Old Swedish
Latinised form of Ake.
Acho m Georgian
Short form of Archil and/or its diminutive Achiko.
Acho m Bulgarian
Diminutive of Angel.
Achu f Aymara
Means "fruit" in Aymara.
Achy m English
Anglicization of Eochaidh
Acie m English
Diminutive of Ace 1.
Aćim m Serbian (Rare)
Serbian short form of Joachim.
Acis m Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latin form of Akis (Ακις), from Greek element ακις (akis) meaning "pointed object" or "little". Acis was the husband of Galatea.
Acol m Nahuatl
Means "shoulder" in Nahuatl.
Acre m English
Potentially transferred use of the surname Acre or from Old English æcer (denoting the amount of land a yoke of oxen could plow in a day), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch akker and German Acker ‘field’, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit ajra ‘field’, Latin ager, and Greek agros.
Acun m Turkish
Means "cosmos, universe" in Turkish.
Adak m & f Turkish
Means "vow, offering" in Turkish.
Adal m & f Turkish
From Turkish ad "name" and al- "receive". Means "May your name be spread, may you achieve fame" in Turkish.
Ádam m Faroese
Faroese form of Adam.
Âdam m Jèrriais
Jèrriais form of Adam.
Adan m English
Variant of Aidan.
Adan f & m Arabic
Arabic form of Eden.
Adan m Walloon, Haitian Creole
Walloon and Haitian Creole form of Adam.
Adan m Ancient Berber
Means "bowel" in Amazigh.
Adar f & m Hebrew
Variant of Adara ("noble, exalted, praised"). Adar features in the Jewish calendar as the name of the twelfth month of the biblical year and the sixth month of the civil year, when Purim is celebrated ('thus girls born during this period often bear the name Adara').
Adar m Kurdish
Means "the month of March" in Kurdish.
Adas m Indian (Anglicized, Modern, Archaic)
Means "free man, not a slave" in Sanskrit.
Adaś m Polish
Diminutive of Adam.
Aday m Spanish (Canarian)
From Charco Aday ("Aday Pond"), a place in the island of Gran Canaria, Canary Islands. It may ultimately come from a Spanish surname or from a Guanche name. In any case, it was reclaimed as a Guanche name and has been used in modern times.
Adda m Welsh
Welsh form of Adam.
Adda f Medieval French
Medieval French form of Ada 1.
Addi f English
Variant of Addy 1.
Addi m Biblical Greek
Hellenized form of Iddo, found in the genealogy in Luke.
Addu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Ado.
Addý f Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Addy 1.
Adea f Greek Mythology, Albanian
In Greek mythology, Adea was the birth name of Eurydice.
Adee m & f Arabic
Adek m Polish
Diminutive of Adrian.
Adel f Yiddish, Hebrew
Means "an eternity with God" in Hebrew, from עַד (ʿaḏ) "an eternity" and אֵל (ʾēl) "God, the supreme deity, esp. the supreme God of Israel".... [more]
Adel f Hungarian
Hungarian borrowing of Adele.
Aden m Romansh
Romansh form of Adam, traditionally found in central Grisons.
Aden f & m Arabic
Variant transcription of Adan.
Adha f Arabic
Means "sacrifice" in Arabic.
Adhi m Indonesian
Variant of Adi 2.
Adhy m Indonesian
Variant of Adi 2.
Adia f Igede, Swahili
Means "queen" in Igede and "(valuable) gift" in Swahili, from Hausa adia "gift".
Adib m Arabic, Persian, Malay, Indonesian
Means "cultured, refined, well-mannered in Arabic.
Adid m Berber
Meaning unknown.
Adie f English
Diminutive of Adrienne.
Adie m Medieval English
Medieval pet form of Adam.
Adie m Indonesian
Variant of Adi 2.
Adim m & f Efik
Adın m Turkish
Means "What is your name?" in Turkish.
Adin m English
Variant of Aidan.
Adin m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Short form of Adina 1.... [more]
Adio m Yoruba
Means "bundled up and stood erect" in Yoruba, referring to someone who stands strong and tall.
Adit m Indonesian, Indian, Hindi
Derived from Sanskrit आदित (adita) meaning "beginning, precedence". It could also be used as a short form of the name Aditya.
Adit m Khmer
Possibly from the Khmer word meaning "former, past, ancient", or a Khmer transciption of Adit.
Adiv m Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Means "kind, gracious, polite" in Hebrew.
Ådjî m Medieval Walloon
Walloon form of Alger.
Adji m Indonesian
Variant of Aji.
Adka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Ada 1.
Adla f Bosnian, Arabic
Female form of Adil.
Adli m Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Means "my justice, my fairness" in Arabic, derived from عَادِل ('adil) meaning "fair, honest, just".
Adli m Biblical Latin
Latin form of Adlai, attested only in the genitive.
Adly m Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Arabic alternate transcription of Adli as well as a Malay and Indonesian variant.
Adna m Biblical
One of the family of Pahath-moab, who returned with Ezra and married a foreign wife. ( Ezra 10:30 ) (B.C. 459.) ... [more]
Ådne m Norwegian
Dialectical form of Árni.
Adóm m Kashubian
Kashubian form of Adam.
Adom m Romansh
Variant of Adam.
Adón m Spanish
Spanish form of Adon. It coincides with the Hebrew epithet for God אדון (Adón) meaning "lord".
Adon m History (Ecclesiastical, Gallicized)
French form of Ado 3, which was originally a short form of Germanic names beginning with the element adal meaning "noble"... [more]
Ador m Filipino
Short form of Dominador.
Adra m Indian
Means "rock" or "hard".
Adra f & m Arabic, Muslim
Meaning, "virgin."
Adri f & m Italian, English, Spanish, French, Danish, Portuguese
Diminutive of Adrian, Adriana, and other names beginning with Adri.
Adri m Indian
Indian name meaning "stone, mountain", and by extension "cloud". Some ancient Hindu beliefs claimed that mountains were solidified clouds.
Adso m Literature
Form of Azzo. Adso da Melk is a fictional Medieval character in Umberto Eco masterpiece 'Il nome della rosa' (1980). That character is loosely based on a real person: the monk Adso de Montier-en-Der (910/915 – 992)... [more]
Adua f Tigrinya (Italianized, Rare), Italian (Rare)
Italian form of ዓድዋ also spelled Adwa or Aduwa. This is an Ethiopian town whose name means "village of Awa (people)" in Tigrinya.... [more]
Aduç m Kalmyk
Means "herder, herdsman" in Kalmyk.
Adul m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อดุลย์ (see Adun).
Adun m Thai
Means "incomparable, matchless" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit अतुल्य (atulya).
Aduś m Polish
Diminutive of Adrian.
Aduš m Slovak
Diminutive of Adam.
Adut f Eastern African
This name is borne by Adut Akech Bior ( born 25 December 1999), a South Sudanese-Australian model.
Àdva f Emilian-Romagnol
Emilian form of Adua.
Adya m Russian
Diminutive of Adam.
Adze f & m African Mythology
The adze is a vampiric being in Ewe folklore. It takes the form of a firefly and will transform into human form upon capture.... [more]
Aebe m East Frisian
Variant of Abbe.
Aedd m Welsh, Irish
From the Irish áed "fire". This name was borne by a king of Ireland.
Aega f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Αἴγη (Aige), derived from αἴξ (aix) "she-goat" or ἄϊξ (aix) "gale of wind". In Greek mythology, Aega or Aex nursed the infant Zeus in Crete, along with her sister Helice, after Rhea gave Cronus a stone to swallow instead of the newborn Zeus... [more]
Aein f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese အိမ် (see Eain).
Aeji f Korean
From Sino-Korean 愛 (ae) meaning "love, affection" and 智 (ji) meaning "wisdom, intellect" or 地 (ji) meaning "earth, soil, ground". Other hanja character combinations are possible.
Aeka f Japanese
From Japanese 亜 (a) meaning "second, Asia", 依 (e) meaning "rely on" combined with 霞 (ka) meaning "mist". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Aeko f Japanese (Rare)
This name can be used as 亜依子, 亜衣子 or 安衣子 with 亜 (a, tsu.gu) meaning "Asia, come after, rank next", 安 (an, yasu, yasu.i, yasu.maru, yasu.raka, a) meaning "cheap, contented, low, peaceful, quiet, relax, rested", 依 (i, e, yo.ru) meaning "consequently, depend on, due to, reliant, therefore" and 衣 (i, e, kinu, -gi, koromo) meaning "clothes, dressing, garment."... [more]
Aela f Breton (Modern)
Feminine form of Ael and cognate of Angela.
Aele m & f East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of Ale 2 recorded in the 17th century for men and in the 15th and 17th centuries for women in East Frisia.
Aene m & f Arabic
Variant transcription of Ain.
Aeng f Korean
From Sino-Korean 櫻 (aeng) meaning "cherry, cherry blossom".
Æon f Popular Culture
Used by animator Peter Chung for his character Æon Flux, from the name of a type of spirit being in Gnosticism, an emanation from the Godhead, ultimately from a Proto-Indo-European base meaning "vital force, life, long life, eternity".... [more]
Aeon m Greek Mythology (Latinized), Roman Mythology
Latinized form of Aion. Aion became a symbol during the Roman Empire and as such coins with his imagery were issued.
Ae-ra f Korean
From Sino-Korean 愛 "love" and 羅 "net for catching birds". A famous bearer is South Korean actress Shin Ae-ra (1969-).
Ae-ri f Korean
From Sino-Korean 愛 "love" and 利 "gains, advantage, profit, merit". A famous bearer is South Korean actress Jung Ae-ri (1960-).
Aeri f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 亜 (a) meaning "second, Asia", 永 (e) meaning "eternity, lengthy, long" combined with 利 (ri) meaning "profit, benefit". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Aero f Greek Mythology
Perhaps derived from the Greek verb ἀείρω (aeiro), αἴρω (airo) "to lift up, to raise". In Greek mythology, Aero (also called Haero, Aerope and Maerope) was a princess of the island of Chios, a daughter of Oenopion and Helice... [more]
Aero m English (American, Modern, Rare), Popular Culture
From the English combining form (aero-), ultimately from Greek ἀήρ (aer) "air" (originally "the lower air, the air that surrounds the earth" as opposed to αἰθήρ (aither) "the upper air"; compare Aither)... [more]
Aert m Medieval Dutch
Medieval Dutch form of Aart.
Aeru f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Aero.
Æsa f Old Norse, Icelandic, Faroese
Old Norse, Icelandic and Faroese variant of Ása.
Aeta f English (British)
This name derives from the a palm tree called the Aeta Palma (Mauritia Flexuosa), discovered in British Guiana and named by a the botanist William Davis Lamb who then used the name for his daughter.
Aetz m Basque (Modern, Rare)
From Old Basque aetz meaning "from Aezkoa Valley", in the north of Navarre.
Aeuj f Zhuang
Means "purple" in Zhuang.
A-eun f Korean
Combination of an a hanja, like 娥 meaning "pretty, lovely, beautiful," 雅 meaning "clean, pure" or 我 meaning "I, me," and an eun hanja, such as 恩 meaning "favour, grace" or 銀 meaning "silver."
Afae m African
Diminutive of Afeworq.
Afan m Welsh, Medieval Welsh
The name of a river in South Wales, usually Anglicized as Avon or Avan, presumably derived from Celtic *abon- "river" (making it a cognate of Afon)... [more]
Afaq f Azerbaijani
From Arabic آفاق ('afaq) meaning "horizons, the world", the plural form of أفق ('ufuq) meaning "horizon". According to some, this was the name of poet Nizami Ganjavi's first wife.
Afət f Azerbaijani
Means "misfortune, mischief; beautiful woman, beauty" in Azerbaijani, ultimately from Arabic آفة ('āfa).
Afef f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant transcription of Afaf (chiefly Tunisian).
Afek m & f Hebrew
This name is possibly a combination of the names Afik and Ofek
Afet f Turkish
Means "ravishingly beautiful" in Turkish.
Affa m East Frisian (Archaic)
Short version of the name Alfwin.
Affe m Swedish
Diminutive of Alf 1.
Affo m East Frisian
Short version of the name Alfwin.
Affu m Finnish
Finnish variant form of Affe.
Affy f English (Australian)
Australian name meaning "Princess of the moon".