Submitted Names of Length 8

This is a list of submitted names in which the length is 8.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Dak-hyeon m Korean
This name is a masculine version of the korean female name Dahyun, or Da-hyeon.
Dakshira f Sanskrit (Modern)
The most able on this earth, goddess Durga... [more]
Dalay-kys f Tuvan
From Tuvan далай (dalay) meaning "sea, ocean" and кыс (kys) meaning "girl, daughter".
Dalay-ool m Tuvan
From Tuvan далай (dalay) meaning "sea, ocean" and оол (ool) meaning "son, boy".
Dalbaray f Yakut
From an alternative Sakha word for "skylark".
Dalbyeol f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
Means "satellite" from 달 (dal, “moon”) combined with 별 (byeol, “star”).
Dalebora f Polish
Feminine form of Dalebor.
Dalewuja f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalewin.
Dalğınay f Azerbaijani
Means "pensive moon" in Azerbaijani.
Dalimila f Czech (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalimil.
Dallilja f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the Old Norse name elements dalr "dale, valley" and lilja "lily".
Dalmacio m Spanish, Galician, Cebuano
Spanish and Galician form of Dalmatius.
Dalmatia f Medieval French
From Latin Dalmatia meaning "Dalmatian, of Dalmatia".
Dalmazia f Italian (Rare)
Feminine form of Dalmazio.
Damaride f Italian
Italian form of Damaris.
Damarisz f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Damaris.
Damarius m African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the popular name prefix da and Marius, in a similar fashion to Damarion.
Damaruki f Sanskrit, Indian, Hindi, Sinhalese, Nepali, Telugu, Tamil
MEANING : a sort of drum... [more]
Damasius m Ancient Roman
Variant form of Damasus.
Damaspia f Old Persian (Hellenized)
Hellenized form of Old Persian Jamaspi combined with the adjectival suffix -𐎹 (-ya).
Damastor m Greek Mythology
Ancient Greek masculine name meaning "tamer".
Damianne f English
Feminine form of Damian.
Damilare m Yoruba
Yoruba... [more]
Damilola m & f Yoruba
Means "God makes me wealthy" in Yoruba.
Daminika f Belarusian
Feminine form of Daminik.
Damjanus m Gothic
Gothic form of Damian.
Damodika f Ancient Greek
δῆμος (demos) "of the people" + δικη (diké) "justice"
Damoklea f Ancient Greek
Feminine form of Damokles.
Damontre m African American
Meaning unknown.
Damophon m Ancient Greek
Variant of Demophon. This name was borne by an ancient Greek sculptor from the 2nd century BC.
Damotima f Ancient Greek
δῆμος (demos) "of the people" + τίμα (tima) "honour, esteem, reverence"
Damoxena f Ancient Greek
Feminine form of Damoxenos.
Damyanti f Tamil
Meaning "Beautiful".
Danaisak m Thai
From Thai ดนัย (danai) meaning "son" and ศักดิ์ (sak) meaning "power".
Dancheng f & m Chinese
From the Chinese 丹 (dān) meaning "cinnabar, vermilion" and 骋 (chěng) meaning "galloping horse".
Dandauda m Hausa
Is the name given to Sulaiman
Dandinha f Portuguese
Diminutive of Daiana and Daniela.
Daneczka f Polish
Diminutive form of Danuta.
Daneille f English (Rare), Jamaican Patois
Possibly an anagram of Danielle influenced by Tennille.
Daneliia f Kazakh
Variant transcription of Данэлия (see Daneliya.
Danelíus m Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Danelius.
Danelius m Norwegian (Rare)
Latinized form of Daniel.
Daneliya f Kazakh (Rare)
From Persian دان (dân) meaning "knowing, able" and Turkic el meaning "country, society".
Danelken f Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Possibly a diminutive of a name starting with Dan-, like Daniela (compare Anniken, Gisken, and Maiken).
Danforth m English
Transferred use of the surname Danforth.
Danidain m Arthurian Cycle
A knight from Lyonesse and cousin of Breuse the Pitiless, whose evil disposition he shared. Lancelot killed him.
Danielka f Czech, Slovak, Polish, Bulgarian, Macedonian
Diminutive of Daniela (compare Polish and Czech Irenka).
Daníella f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Daniella.
Daniëlla f Dutch
Dutch form of Daniella.
Daniello m Italian
Variant of Daniel or masculine form of Daniela.
Daniellu m Corsican, Sardinian
Corsican and Sardinian form of Daniel.
Danielys f Spanish (Caribbean)
Combination of Daniela and -lys.
Daniette f English (Rare)
Feminine diminutive of Daniel. See also Danette.
Daniiela f Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Danielle.
Danilbek m Chechen
Combination of Danil (see Daniel or Daniil) and the Ottoman Turkish title بك (beg) meaning "ruler, chief, lord".
Daniseto f Provençal
Diminutive of Danièlo.
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]
Danisoun m Provençal
Diminutive of Danis and Danièl.
Daniyaal m Urdu (Rare)
Alternate transcription of Danyal.
Dankfrid m German
German form of Thancfrid.
Dankhard m German
German form of Thanchard.
Dankward m German
German form of Thancward.
Dankwart m German (Rare, Archaic), Germanic Mythology
Formed from the German name elements DANK "thought" and WART "guard".... [more]
Danuchna f Polish
Diminutive of Danuta.
Danuhepa f Hittite
Etymology uncertain. The second element of the name (hepa) likely derives from the Hurrian sun goddess Ḫepat. Danuhepa was a Hittite queen who was likely the wife of Mursili II.
Danuphol m Thai
Alternate transcription of Danuphon.
Danuphon m Thai
Means "my strength, my power" from Thai ดนุ (danu) meaning "I, my" and พล (phon) meaning "force, strength, power".
Danushka m Sinhalese
Alternate transcription of Sinhala ධනුෂ්ක (see Dhanushka).
Dañ-xayaa f Tuvan
Means "dawn-dusk" in Tuvan.
Daphrose f French (African, Rare)
French form of Dafrosa (via Latin Daphrosa).
Daquanda f African American (Rare)
Feminine elaboration of Daquan using the same suffix found in names such as Yolanda, LaWanda and Lashonda.
Daquanna f African American (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Daquan or elaboration of Quanna.
Daquisha f African American (Rare)
Elaboration of Quisha using the popular prefix Da-.
Daraar-tu f Sidamo
Means "she blossomed" in Sidama.
Darafiej m Belarusian
Belarusian form of Dorotheos (see Dorothea).
Daralynn f & m English (Modern, Rare)
A combination of Dara and Lynn.... [more]
Daramfon m & f Ibibio
Means "rejoice at grace" in Ibibio.
Darasimi m & f Nigerian
the name come from Nigeria and it can be use for any gender and it mean god love you
Darcilla f English (Rare)
Possibly an altered form of Drusilla, or an elaboration of Darcy with the clearly feminine ending illa.
Dardanas m Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Dardanos.
Dardinne m Jèrriais
Diminutive of Êdouard.
Dargailė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Dargailas.
Dargaudė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Dargaudas.
Dargintė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Dargintas.
Dariella f Italian (Rare)
Diminutive of Daria.
Darielle f English
Strictly feminine form of Dariel.
Darienne f English
Feminine form of Darien.
Darimush m Akkadian
Akkadian form of Darius.
Darispan m Georgian (Rare), Literature
Means "door of Isfahan", derived from the Persian noun در (dar) meaning "door, gate" combined with Spahān, which is the Middle Persian name for the modern city of اصفهان (Isfahan) in Iran.... [more]
Darkhaan m Yakut
Means "arrogant, conceited, proud".
Darkisha f African American (Rare)
Combination of the prefix dar with Kisha.
Darkseid m Popular Culture
Darkseid (pronounced "Darkside'') is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Darlaine f English
Variant of Darlene.
Darlanne f English (Rare)
Combination of Darla or Darlene with Anne 1.
Darlynne f English
Variant of Darlyn.
Darmantė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Darmantas.
Darmawan m Indonesian
From Indonesian darma meaning "good deed, duty", ultimately from Sanskrit धर्म (dharma), combined with the masculine suffix -wan.
Darmintė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Darmintas.
Darnelle f & m African American (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form or variant of Darnell.
Darnitta f African American
Elaboration of the feminized version of Darnell.
Daromila f Medieval Russian
Meaning "dear gift".
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.
Darqueze m African American (Rare)
A modern invented name of unknown meaning, possibly influenced by Marquise.
Darrique m Jèrriais
Diminutive of Êdouard.
Dartautė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Dartautas.
Darthula f American (South, Rare, Archaic)
Either a variant of Dorthula or from the poem by Scottish poet James Macpherson of the same name.
Darvilas m Lithuanian
Basically means "working to hope", derived from Lithuanian daryti meaning "to do, to act" as well as "to work" combined with Baltic vil meaning "hope" (see Viltautas).
Darvydas m Lithuanian
Basically means "working to see", derived from Lithuanian daryti meaning "to do, to act" as well as "to work" combined with Baltic vyd meaning "to see" (see Vytautas)... [more]
Darweesh m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic درويش (see Darwish).
Darylann f Popular Culture
A compound of the names Daryl and Ann borne by a recurring character in 'Hill Street Blues' played by the actress Deborah Richter.
Daryogul f Tajik, Uzbek (Rare, ?)
Composed of Tajik дарё (daryo), Uzbek daryo meaning "river" and Tajik гул (gul), Uzbek gul meaning "flower".
Daryusha 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]
Dascylus m Greek Mythology
Ancient Greek masculine name meaning "teacher, instructor".
Daşdəmir m Azerbaijani
From Azerbaijani daş meaning "stone" and dəmir meaning "iron".
Daš-demir m Tuvan
Tuvan cognate of Tashtemir.
Dashamir m Albanian
Derived from Albanian dashamir "well-wishing, benevolent; kind, friendly".
Dasheena f African American
Combination of the popular name prefix Da- and Sheena.
Dashenka f Russian
Diminutive of Darya 1.
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).
Dashurie f Albanian
Derived from Albanian dashuri "love, affection; enthusiasm".
Dəstəgül f Azerbaijani
Means "bouquet of flowers, roses" in Azerbaijani.
Datbyeol f & m Korean (Modern, Rare)
From native Korean 닻별 (datbyeol), referring to the Cassiopeia constellation, from a combination of 닻 (dat) meaning "anchor" and Byeol.... [more]
Daugailė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugailas.
Daugaudė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugaudas.
Daugintė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugintas.
Daugirdė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugirdas.
Daugvilė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugvilas.
Daugvydė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daugvydas. Also compare Daugaviete.
Daujotas m Lithuanian
Derived from Lithuanian daug meaning "much" (see Daumantas) combined with the Lithuanian verb joti meaning "to ride horseback". In other words: this given name is basically the same as Jodaugas, but with the name elements in different places.
Daumantė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Daumantas.
Daumants m Latvian
Latvian form of Daumantas.
Daumintė f Lithuanian
Variant form of Daugmintė.
Daunoras m Lithuanian
Means "much desire", derived from Lithuanian daug meaning "much" (see Daumantas) combined with the Lithuanian noun noras meaning "wish, desire", which is ultimately derived from the Lithuanian verb norėti meaning "to wish, to want, to desire".
Dautaras m Lithuanian
Masculine form of Dautara.
Davaajav m & f Mongolian
Derived from Mongolian даваа (davaa) meaning "Monday" or "mountain pass, threshold" and жав (jav) meaning "salvation, deliverance"... [more]
Davalynn f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Allegedly a feminization of David via its short form Dave and the popular name suffix -lynn.
Davarryl m African American (Modern, Rare)
DaVarryl Williamson (b. 1968) is an American boxer.
Daveline f English (Modern, Rare)
Presumably a feminization of David combining its short form Dave with the common feminine name suffix -line.
Davelyne f African American
Combination of Dave and lynn
Davidena f English (Canadian)
Feminine form of David used in Prince Edward Island, Canada and possibly amongst Irish.
Davidson m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Davidson.
Davincia f Southern African
Peace and love
Davlatoy f Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek davlat meaning "country" or "wealth, fortune, happiness" and oy meaning "moon".
Davorina f Slovene
Feminine form of Davorin.
Davronoy f Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek davron meaning "ages, epochs" and oy meaning "moon".
Davrusha f Yiddish
Allegedly a Yiddish form of Deborah.
Dawnelle f American (Rare)
Most likely an elaboration of Dawn by way of combining it with the popular name suffix -elle.
Dawnetta f English
Elaborated form of Dawn. Also compare Dawna, Donetta and Donnetta.
Dawnette f English, Jamaican Patois
Possibly an elaborated form of Dawn influenced by Danette.
Dawnyale f African American, English (American)
Variant of Danielle, perhaps inspired by Dawn.
Dayanara f Spanish (Latin American), American (Hispanic)
Possibly an elaboration of Dayana or a variant of Deyanira. This is borne by Dayanara Torres (1974-), a Puerto Rican actress, singer, model, writer and former Miss Universe.
Dayanita f Indian, Hindi
Name allegedly meaning “tender” or “kind”.
Daylinda f Filipino, Cebuano
Meaning uncertain.
Dayshawn m African American
Combination of the phonetic element day with the name Shawn.
Deaghadh m Irish
Personal name of uncertain origin. It may be a compound of deagh- ‘good’ + ádh ‘luck’, ‘fate’.
Deahppán m Sami
Sami form of Stefan.
Deandrea f African American (Modern)
Combination of the popular name prefix De and Andrea 2 (compare Deandra, DeAndre, Deanna).
Deandria f African American (Rare)
Elaboration of Deandra or combination of popular prefix De- with Andrea 2.
Deangela f African American (Rare)
Combination of Angela with the prefix De-, making it the feminine form of DeAngelo.
Debashis m Indian, Bengali
Bengali form of Devashish.
Debralee f English
Combination of Debra and Lee.
Debriana f American (Modern, Rare)
A combination of the names Debra and Ana, the fusion possibly influenced by the name Brianna.
DeCarlos m African American
Combination of the popular name prefix de and Carlos.
December f & m English
Derived from the Latin word decem, meaning "ten". December is the twelfth month on the Gregorian calendar. This name is used regularly in America, mostly on females.
Decencio m Spanish
Spanish form of Decentius.
Decentia f Late Roman
Late Roman female equivalent to Decentius
Decenzia f Italian (Rare)
Feminine form of Decenzio.
Decenzio m Italian
Italian form of Decentius.
Declunus m Roman Mythology
An important god (or perhaps goddess, known as Decluna) of the Volscians, an ancient people of Italy who were frequently at war with the Romans and subsequently conquered and assimilated... [more]
Decorsie m American (South)
American English regional name (Appalachian).
Dederica f Italian (Archaic), Spanish (Archaic), English (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Feminine form of Dederico (Italian and Spanish), English variant of Dedericka and Dutch variant of Diederika.
Dederico m Italian (Archaic), Spanish (Archaic)
Italian and Spanish form of Dederick. Also see Teodorico.
Dederika f English (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
English variant of Dedericka and Dutch variant of Diederika.
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]
Deeandra f African American (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Diandra or combination of Dee and Andra.
Deeshant m Hindi
end of all directions
Defiance f Romani (Archaic)
Derived from the English word denoting a disposition to resist.
Degenher m Germanic
Derived from the Old High German elements degan "soldier, warrior" and heri "army".
Degenolf m German
German form of Theganolf.
Deidamia f Ancient Greek (Latinized), Greek Mythology (Latinized), Theatre
From Greek Δηιδάμεια (Deidameia), possibly derived from δηιόω (dêioô) "to destroy" (cf. Deianira) and δαμάζειν (damazein) "to tame"... [more]
Deifobos m Romanian (Rare), Polish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare)
Romanian, Polish and Norwegian form of Deiphobus.
Deilotte f French (Archaic)
Feminine form of Deile found in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region up until the 1800s.
Deioneus m Greek Mythology
Said to mean "ravager" from Greek δηιόω (dêioô) "to cut down, slay; to waste or ravage a country" (compare the first element in Deianeira). This was the name of several characters in Greek mythology.
Deiphobe f Greek Mythology, Roman Mythology
Feminine form of Deiphobos. In Greek and Roman mythology, Deiphobe was a daughter of the seer Glaukos, an oracle of Apollo at Cumae in Italy, and later became known as the Cumaean Sybil... [more]
Deisenor m Greek Mythology
Derived from the Greek noun δεισήνωρ (deisenor) meaning "fearing man", which consists of the Greek verb δείδω (deido) meaning "to fear, to dread" combined with the Greek noun ἀνήρ (aner) meaning "man".... [more]
Deityche f Greek Mythology
Etymology uncertain, perhaps derived from δηιόω (dêioô) meaning "to destroy" and τῠ́χη (túkhē) meaning "an act of god, fate, fortune".
Deivison m Portuguese (Brazilian)
Portuguese borrowing of the surname Davison.