Submitted Names of Length 7

This is a list of submitted names in which the length is 7.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Bechora f Jewish, Judeo-Spanish
Feminine form of Bechor.
Beckian f Obscure
First name of poetess Beckian Fritz Goldberg. Possibly a combination of Becki and Ann.
Bedalis m Arthurian Cycle
One manuscript of the Prose Tristan, in departure from the others, describes Tristan’s death at the hands of a lord named Bedalis.... [more]
Beddina f Sicilian
Diminutive of Bedda.
Beddinu m Sicilian
Variant of Bellinu.
Bedford m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Bedford.
Bediako m Akan
Means "came to engage in wars" in Akan.
Bedrich m Slovak
Slovak cognate of Bedřich.
Bedrije f Albanian
Feminine form of Bedri.
Beeanna f English
Variant of Bianna.
Beecher m English
Transferred use of the surname Beecher.
Beechum m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Beechum.
Beecram m Indian, Hinduism
Variant transcription of Bikram (Hindi: विक्रम)?
Beemoni m Dagbani
Founder of Gushegu and Karaga. Name of one of the sons of Naa Gbewaa.
Beenish f Pakistani
Means "vision, sight" in Urdu.
Beertje f Dutch
Feminine form of Beer. In Dutch, beertje also means "bearlet, little bear".... [more]
Begator m Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian begator "wealthy, prosperous; fertile, fruitful, abundant".
Begilda f Medieval English (Latinized)
Latinized form of Old English Béaghild.
Begimai f Kyrgyz
Variant transcription of Begimay.
Begimay f Kyrgyz
Derived from begum, the feminine form of the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master", combined with Kyrgyz ай (ay) meaning "moon".
Begónia f Hungarian (Rare)
Hungarian form of Begonia.
Begonia f English (Rare), Spanish (Rare), Romani (Archaic)
From the name of a flowering plant, which was named for the French botanist Michel Bégon. In some cases it may be a variant of the Spanish Begoña.
Begonya f Catalan
Catalan form of Begoña.
Beg'ubor f Uzbek
Means "pure, unsullied" in Uzbek.
Behnush f Persian
Alternate transcription of Persian بهنوش (see Behnoush).
Behrang m Persian
From Persian به (beh) meaning "good" and رنگ (rang) meaning "colour".
Behrend m German, East Frisian
Contracted form of Bernhard, first recorded in the 1500s and still in occasional use today.
Behrokh f Persian
From Persian به (beh) meaning "good, excellent" and رخ (rokh) meaning "face, cheek".
Behtash m Persian
Means "good friend; good companion" in Persian.
Behtter m Sami
Sami form of Petter.
Beiaard m Dutch
Dutch form of Bayard.
Beiling f Chinese
From the Chinese 贝 (bèi) meaning "seashell" or "money" and 灵 (líng) meaning "spirit, soul".
Beiniao f Chinese
From the Chinese 蓓 (bèi) meaning "bud" and 袅 (niǎo) meaning "slender and delicate; curling upwards".
Beirong f Chinese
From the Chinese 北 (běi) meaning "north" and 蓉 (róng) meaning "hibiscus".
Beitidh f Scottish Gaelic
Gaelic form of Betsy
Beitong m & f Chinese
From Chinese 北 (běi) meaning "north" combined with 彤 (tóng) meaning "red, vermillion", 统 (tǒng) meaning "command, control, unite, unify", 同 or 仝 (tóng) both meaning "same, identical, together", or 通 (tōng) meaning "pass, travel, go through"... [more]
Beitske f West Frisian
West Frisian diminutive of Elisabeth as well as the feminine form of Beitse.... [more]
Bejamoy f Uzbek
From the Uzbek bejama meaning "decoration" and oy meaning "moon".
Bejirim f Uzbek
Means "dainty" in Uzbek.
Bejkush m Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian bejkush "white-haired (said of sheep); white ram".
Bekaris m Kazakh
Alternate transcription of Kazakh Бекарыс (see Bekarys).
Bekarys m Kazakh
Derived from the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master" combined with Kazakh арыс (arys) meaning "foundation, support, framework" (also used as a territorial unit in the Kazakh Khanate).
Bekeara f Ijaw
Means "Englishwoman" in Ijaw.
Bekhruz m Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Behrouz.
Bekhzod m Uzbek
Uzbek form of Behzad.
Bekkhan m Chechen, Ingush
From the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master" combined with the Turkic title khan meaning "ruler, leader".
Bekunda m African
It is used by the people of the switzerlan of uganda.... [more]
Bekynka f Czech
Diminutive of Rebeka.
Bekzhan m Kazakh, Kyrgyz
From the Turkish military title beg meaning "chieftain, master" and Kazakh and Kyrgyz жан (zhan) meaning "soul".
Belagat f Ottoman Turkish
Means "rhetoric, eloquence" in Ottoman Turkish, ultimately from Arabic بلاغة (balāgha).
Belalûk f Kurdish
Means "sour cherry" in Kurdish.
Belamis m Arthurian Cycle
A duke in Arthur’s service who married the Duchess of the Dark Mountain. He appears in Daniel von dem blühenden Tal, Der Stricker, 1210-1225.
Belarda f Asturian
Feminine form of Belardo.
Belardo m Asturian
Asturian form of Abelardo.
Belarma f Asturian (Rare)
Feminine form of Belarmo.
Belasco m Medieval Basque
Of uncertain origin and meaning. One current theory condsiders this name a diminutive of Beila.
Belaset f Judeo-Anglo-Norman
Derived from Old French bele, the feminine form of the adjective biau, bel "graceful, elegant, courteous; noble; handsome; beautiful" and Old French assez "enough; sufficiently" (which in the context of this name would have been understood as "very").
Belchis m Arthurian Cycle
A character appearing in "Meraugis de Portlesguez" by Raoul de Houdenc, early 13th century.
Beleuzi f & m Ijaw
Means "first born" in Ijaw.
Belgica f German (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from the geographical name Belgium.
Beliana f Obscure
Could be a combination of Bella and Ana.
Belianz m Arthurian Cycle
One of four miscreant brother knights killed by Gawaine in "Diu Crône" by Heinrich von dem Türlin, c. 1230
Belicar m Guanche
The name of a Guanche mencey (leader) from Tenerife.
Believe f & m American (Rare), English (Puritan)
Late Old English belȳfan, belēfan, alteration of gelēfan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch geloven and German glauben, also to lief.
Belikto m Buryat
Means "wisdom" in Buryat.
Belimir m Croatian
The first element of this name is derived from Proto-Slavic bělъ "white, pale". Also see Běla, which is of the same etymology. The second element is derived from Slavic mir "peace".
Bělinka f Czech
Diminutive of Běla.
Belkisa f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Bilqis.
Belkise f Albanian (Rare)
Albanian form of Bilqis.
Bellida f Judeo-Spanish
Diminutive of Bella.
Belling m Anglo-Saxon
Form of Bædling found in the Phillimore translation of Domesday Book.
Bellinu m Sicilian
Diminutive of Bello.
Belluls f Jewish
From the Latin bellule (pretty, nice, well-formed), this is found in a Jewish catacomb in Rome as the name of a woman. It is possibly the precursor to such names as the Sephardic Bela and the Yiddish Shayna
Belmina f Bosnian
Feminine form of Belmin.
Belmira f Portuguese
Most likely a version of Elmira 1, which derives from Edelmira, stemming from Adelmar, which combines the Germanic elements adal meaning "noble" and mari meaning "famous"... [more]
Belmiro m Portuguese
Meaning: handsome, good-looking... [more]
Belmont m French
Transferred from the surname "Belmont."
Belomir m Croatian
Variant form of Belimir.
Beloved f & m English (Puritan), Literature
Meaning, "dearly loved."
Beltrán m Spanish, Galician
Spanish and Galician form of Bertram or Bertrand. It is sometimes given in reference to the 16th-century Spanish saint Louis Bertrand (known as Luis Beltrán in Spanish), a Dominican friar who preached in South America; he is called the "Apostle to the Americas".
Beltran m Catalan
Variant of Bertran.
Beltreg m Mongolian
Means "wolf cub" in Mongolian.
Belucha f Galician
Galician diminutive of Sabela and Isabel.
Belvina f Literature
Apparently from the Latin word meaning "beast-like" (also written beluina), derived from bēlua "beast, monster" (Italian belva) with the adjectival suffix‎ -īnus "of, like"... [more]
Belynda f English
Variant of Belinda.
Belzora f English (American, Rare)
Meaning unknown. It might possibly be derived from Belzora, the name of a port town in Texas that was abandoned in the 1870s.
Beňadik m Slovak
Slovak form of Benedict.
Benajah m Biblical
Variant of Benaiah.
Benammi m Hebrew, Biblical
Means "son of my people" in Hebrew. This is the name of several people in the Bible.
Benardo m Ligurian
Ligurian form of Bernard.
Benaset m Lengadocian
Languedocian form of Benedict.
Benayga f Guanche, Spanish (Canarian, Rare)
Borne by a Guanche girl who was christened in Seville, Spain.
Benazir f & m Urdu, Bengali
From Persian بی‌نظیر (bi-nazir) meaning "incomparable, matchless". It is used as a feminine name in Pakistan while it is typically masculine in Bangladesh. A famous bearer was Benazir Bhutto (1953-2007), the first female prime minister of Pakistan.
Bencomo m Guanche, Spanish (Canarian)
Derived from Guanche benčom meaning "ambitious" or benchomo meaning "the greatest". It belonged to the penultimate mencey (leader) (1423-1495) of Taoro, Tenerife.
Bendewa f Kurdish
Means "hopeful" in Kurdish.
Bendigt m & f Norwegian (Archaic), Swedish (Rare)
Archaic Norwegian variant of Benedikt, as well as a Swedish feminine form.
Bendikt m & f Old Swedish, Norwegian (Archaic), Swedish (Rare)
Contracted form of Benedikt as well as a modern Swedish feminine form.
Bendito m Portuguese (African)
Means "blessed" in Portuguese.
Benecio m Spanish
Benecio means blessed and is from Mexico.
Benedèt m Piedmontese
Piedmontese form of Benedict.
Benedet m Aragonese, Lombard
Aragonese and Lombard form of Benedict.
Benedic m Judeo-Provençal
Judeo-Provençal form of Benedict.
Benedig m Breton (Rare)
Breton form of Benedict.
Benedit m Gascon
Gascon form of Benedict.
Benefşe f Ottoman Turkish
Ottoman Turkish form of Banafsheh.
Benegar m Medieval French, Germanic
Derived from Latin bene meaning "well; agreeably, favorably" combined with Old High German and Old Saxon ger meaning "spear".
Beneita f Sardinian
Feminine form of Beneitu. Beneita de Càlaris was the judge (which equals the title of queen in medieval Sardinia) of Càlaris from 1214 to 1233.
Beneito m Ligurian
Ligurian form of Benedict.
Beneitu m Sardinian (Rare)
Sardinian form of Benedict.
Benelli f English (Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Benelli.
Benerib f Ancient Egyptian
From Egyptian bnr-jb meaning "sweet of heart", derived from bnr "sweet, pleasant" and jb "heart, mind, emotions". This was the name of a queen consort of the First Dynasty in ancient Egypt.
Benesek m Cornish
Cornish form of Benedict, derived from Latin benedictus "blessed".
Benesha f Zulu
Means “they are new” in Zulu.
Benessa f English (American, Rare)
Possibly an Anglicized form of Benicia which was influenced by Vanessa. It might also be a combination of Ben 1 and Vanessa or similar names ending in -essa.
Bénézet m Provençal
Provençal form of Benedict.
Bengisu f Turkish
Means water of eternality, aqua vitæ, the water believed to give one eternal life. Derives from Old Turkic Beñgüsuv/Meñgüsuv consisting of Beñgü, Meñgü (eternal, everlasting, immortal) and Suv (water).
Benhail m Biblical Hebrew
Hebrew boy's name meaning "son of strengths"
Benhart m Norwegian (Expatriate)
Variant of Bernhardt. Used by many Norwegian and Swedish immigrants to the Upper Midwest of the United States during the 19th century.
Benicia f Spanish
Feminine form of Benicio.
Benigez f Breton
Variant of Beniga.
Benignu m Sicilian
Sicilian form of Benigno.
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]
Bénilde f & m French (Rare)
French form of Benilda.... [more]
Benilde f Italian (Rare), Spanish (Rare), Portuguese
Italian, Spanish and Portuguese form of Benilda.
Beninja f Slovene
Diminutive of Benedikta.
Beninye f & m Dagbani
Means "stay and witness" in Dagbani.
Benjáme m Sami
Sami form of Benjamin.
Benjamí m Catalan
Catalan form of Benjamin.
Benjirō m Japanese
This name combines 弁/辨 (hen, ben, araso.u, hanabira, wakima.eru, wa.keru) meaning "dialect, speech, petal" or 勉 (ben, tsuto.meru) meaning "exertion" with 次 (shi, ji, tsugi, tsu.gu) meaning "next, second," 治 (ji, chi, osa.ma/eru, nao.su/ru) meaning "cure, heal, rule" or 二 (ji, ni, futa(.tsu), futata.bi) meaning "two" and 郎 (ryou, rou, otoko) meaning "son."... [more]
Benjman m English
Variant of Benjamin.
Benjuda m Judeo-Catalan
Meaning unknown, possibly a variant of Bonjudas.
Bennath f Cornish (Rare)
Directly taken from Cornish bennath "blessing".
Benneke m & f East Frisian (Archaic)
Short version of names containing the name element bern meaning bear.
Bennert m Dutch
Dutch form of Bernard.
Benniga f Breton (Rare)
Feminine form of Benniged.
Bennone m Italian
Italian form and variant of Benno.
Benofer m Coptic
Coptic form of the ancient Egyptian given name Wenennefer.
Benoist m Medieval French, French
Medieval French form of Benedict. (Cf. Benoît.)
Benosso m Ligurian
Ligurian form of Benozzo.
Bénouet m Picard
Picard form of Benoît.
Benouét m Norman
Norman form of Benedict.
Bénouot m Picard
Picard form of Benoît.
Benrimo m Guanche
Variant of Benrimon.
Bentang m & f Sundanese
Sundanese form of Bintang.
Bentína f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Bentina.
Bentine f Norwegian (Rare)
Elaboration of Bente.
Bentlee m American
Variant of Bentley.
Bentura m Sardinian
Nuorese contracted form of Bonaventura.
Benucha f Galician
Hypocoristic of Benigna.
Benuela f Albanian (Rare)
Of unknown meaning.
Benvida f Medieval Galician
Derived from Galician benvida, the feminine form of the adjective benvido "welcome".
Benvido m Medieval Galician
Derived from the Galician the adjective benvido "welcome".
Benyapa f Thai
Of uncertain etymology.
Benyuan m Chinese
From the Chinese 本 (běn) meaning "root, origin" and 元 (yuán) meaning "first, origin".
Benzion m Hebrew (Rare)
Means "son of Zion" in Hebrew.
Beodeul f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From native Korean 버들 (beodeul) meaning "willow."
Beollán m Old Irish, Medieval Irish
Derived from Old Irish beoll "(glowing) fire" and the diminutive suffix -án. Beollán mac Ciarmaic (died 969) was a king of Brega.
Beomann m English
A English name that means "Beekeeper".
Beom-gyu m Korean
Combination of a beom hanja, e.g. 範 meaning "standard, norm; example, model," and a gyu hanja, e.g. 奎 meaning "star; sentence, writing; stride."
Berahim m Malay (Rare), Indonesian (Rare)
Malay and Indonesian form of Ibrahim (see Abraham).
Béralde m Theatre
Meaning unknown. It was used by Molière for a character in his play 'The Imaginary Invalid'.
Berarda f Gascon
Feminine form of Berard.
Berarde f Medieval French
Feminine form of Berard.
Berbang f Kurdish
Means "dawn" in Kurdish.
Berchan m Irish, Filipino
A well-known saint of the early Irish church was named Berchan the Prophet of Clonsast in King's Co., but often called Brachan by Metathesis. Often used as a surname.
Berchar m Germanic, Frankish
Frankish variant of Bernhar with the elements bero "bear" and hari "army".
Berc'hed f Breton
Breton form of Bridget.
Berdien f Dutch
Variant form of Berdine, with its spelling more phonetical in nature. A known bearer of this name is the Dutch flutist Berdien Stenberg (b. 1957).
Berdina f Bodo
Means "glorious" in Bodo.
Berdine f Dutch
Contracted form of Bernardine. In some cases, it can also be a variant form of Bertine.
Bereniç f Catalan
Catalan form of Berenice.
Beretta f English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Beretta. The usage in the USA is probably influenced by the fact that there is a producer of firearms named Beretta.
Berette f Swedish
Variant of Berete.
Berezko f Basque Mythology
The natural form of Aide as oppose to Aideko, the supernatural form
Berfhat m Kurdish
Derived from the Kurdish phrase berf hat meaning "snow is here".
Berfrid m Medieval French, Medieval German, Germanic
Derived from Old High German, Old Saxon bero "bear" and Old High German fridu, Old Saxon frithu "peace".
Bergama f Medieval Italian
Feminine form of Bergamo.
Bergamo m Medieval Italian
Derived from Latin Bergomum, ultimately from Proto-Germanic bergaz "mountain". This is the name of an Italian city which was also used as a personal name.
Bergdís f Old Norse, Icelandic
Combination of the Old Norse name elements borg "stronghold, fortification, castle" or bjǫrg "help, deliverance" and dís "goddess; woman, lady; sister" or dis "wise woman, seeress; woman, virgin".
Bergida f Provençal
Provençal form of Bridget.
Bergrán f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Derived from Old Norse bjǫrg "help, salvation" combined with the name of the Norse goddess Rán.
Bergrós f Icelandic
Combination of the Old Norse name elements borg "stronghold, fortification, castle" or bjǫrg "help, deliverance" and rós "rose" (ultimately from Latin rosa "rose").
Bergtór m Faroese
Faroese modern form of Bergþórr.
Bergulf m Medieval English
Variant of Bergulfr (see Borgulfr).
Bergulv m Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Modern Norwegian form of Bergulfr.
Berhtel m Anglo-Saxon
Derived from Old English berht "bright, clear", an alternative form of beorht.
Bêrîcan f Kurdish
From bêrî meaning "yearning" and can meaning "soul".
Berilla f English (Rare, Archaic)
This name is probably an elaboration of Beryl. It was used from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth century.
Berillo m History (Ecclesiastical)
Italian form of Beryllus. The name coincides with Italian berillo "beryl".
Berimir m Croatian
Derived from Slavic brati "reap, gather" (also see Berislav) combined with Slavic mir "peace".
Beriong m Filipino
Diminutive of Silverio.
Beritda m Ngas
BERITDA in Ngas language of plateau state means."""it turns out to be good?... [more]
Berivan f Kurdish
"Shepard" Sivan in Kurdish
Berivoj m Croatian (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements birati "to take, to gather" (in an inflected form) and voi "soldier".
Berkcan m Turkish
From the words berk, meaning "strong", and can, meaning "soul".
Berklee f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Exclusively feminine variant of Berkeley.
Berkley m & f English
Variant of Berkeley.
Berlian f & m Indonesian
Means "diamond" in Indonesian, borrowed from English brilliant.
Berlina f Indonesian, South African, Filipino, Dutch (Rare)
Clearly feminine form of Berlin or a simplified form of Berlinda.
Berlind f Germanic, German (Rare)
Derived from Proto-Germanic *beran or *bernu "bear" (bero and bern in Old High German) combined with Old High German lind or lindi "soft, tender."
Berlioz m Popular Culture
Transferred use of the French surname Berlioz, borne by Louis-Hector Berlioz (1803–1869) a French Romantic composer and conductor... [more]
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".
Bèrnabé m Jèrriais
Jèrriais form of Barnabas.
Bernabe f Medieval Occitan
Medieval Occitan variant feminine form of Bernat.
Bernabe m Spanish (Latin American, Americanized, Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian, Rare), Filipino (Hispanicized, Rare)
Unaccented form of Bernabé used mainly in America and the Philippines. It's also used in Brazil.... [more]
Bernabè m Ligurian
Ligurian form of Barnabas.
Bernabë m Gallo
Gallo form of Barnabé.
Bernabò m Italian
Variant of Barnaba.
Bernada f Catalan (Archaic)
Feminine form of Bernat.
Bernald m German
German form of Bernwald.
Bernart m Medieval French, Medieval Occitan, Judeo-French
Old French and Old Occitan forms of Bernard.
Bernasz m Medieval Polish
Medieval Polish variant of Bernardyn.
Berneda f American (Archaic)
Transferred use of the surname Berneda.
Berneen f South African (Modern, Rare), Irish
Irish short form of Bernadette using the diminuitive suffix ín.
Bernell m & f English (American, Rare)
From the surname Bernell.... [more]
Bernett m & f English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Bernett.
Bernhar m Germanic
Derived from Proto-Germanic beran or bernu "bear" (bero and bern in Old High German) combined with Old High German hari "army."
Bernier m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Bernhar.
Bernita f American
Variant of Bernadette or diminutive of names containing Bern and followed by the suffix -ita.
Bernlef m Germanic, Dutch
The first element of this name is derived from Proto-Germanic beran or bernu "bear" (bero and bern in Old High German). The second element comes from laifa, which in turn is derived from Gothic laiba (leiba in Old High German and leifr in Old Norse) "remnant, remains." By that, they actually meant the person that is left behind after one's death, so laifa is best translated (depending on the context) as "heir" or "survivor."