Submitted Names Matching Pattern *a*r*

This is a list of submitted names in which the pattern is *a*r*.
gender
usage
pattern
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Ataru m Japanese
From Japanese 当 (ataru) meaning "target, hit, objective, correct, appropriate, right", 任 (ataru) meaning "appoint, responsibility, term, duty, to entrust to" or 陽 (ataru) meaning "the sun, yang principle, light, male"... [more]
Atasara f Guanche, Spanish (Canarian)
Meaning unknown. It was borne by a 7-year-old Guanche girl sold at the slave market in Valencia in 1495.
Ata ur-Rahman m Arabic, Indian (Muslim)
Means "gift of the merciful" in Arabic from عطاء (ʿaṭāʾ) meaning "gift" and الرحْمن (raḥman) meaning "merciful".
Atbir m Berber
Means "dove" in Amazigh.
Atchara f Thai
Means "angel" in Thai.
Atcharaphon f Thai
From Thai อัจฉรา (atchara) meaning "angel" and พร (phon) meaning "blessing".
Atcharapon f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อัจฉราพร (see Atcharaphon).
Atcharaporn f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อัจฉราพร (see Atcharaphon).
Atcharee f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อัจฉรีย์ (see Atchari).
Atchari f Thai
Either derived from Thai อัจฉรา (atchara) meaning "angel" or อัจฉริยะ (atchariya) meaning "marvellous, wonderful, exceptional".
Atchariya f & m Thai
Means "marvellous, wonderful, exceptional" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit आश्चर्य (āścarya). The spelling อัจฉริยา is used for females while อัจฉริยะ is used for males.
Atdlarneĸ m Greenlandic
Means "clear sky" in Greenlandic.
Atenagora m Italian
Italian form of Athenagoras.
Atenágoras m Portuguese
Portuguese form of Athenagoras.
Atenagoras m Polish
Polish form of Athenagoras.
Atenàgores m Catalan
Catalan form of Athenagoras.
Atenagoro m Esperanto
Esperanto form of Athenagoras.
Atenodor m Polish, Catalan
Catalan and Polish form of Athenodorus.
Aterah f Hebrew (?)
Possibly a variation of the name Atarah.
Aterbe f Basque
Derived from Basque aterbe/aterpe "shelter; refuge", this name is sometimes understood as a Basque equivalent to Spanish Amparo.... [more]
Ateret f Hebrew
Etymology uncertain, possibly a variant form of Atara.
Ateri f Nigerian, Eggon
Means "victory" in Eggon.
Athalaric m Germanic, History
Form of Adalric. This name was borne by a king of the Ostrogoths in the 6th century AD, who was a grandson of Theodoric the Great.
Athalarich m German
German form of Athalaric.
Athalarik m Dutch
Dutch form of Athalaric.
Aðalbergur m Icelandic
Masculine form of Aðalborg.
Aðalbert m Icelandic (Modern, Rare), Old Norse
Old Norse and modern Icelandic cognate of Adalbert or Ethelbert. The name is a compound of the Old West Norse elements aðal "nature, disposition" or "noble; foremost, premier" + bjartr "bright" (cf... [more]
Aðalbjörk f Old Norse
Derived from the Old Norse elements aðal "noble" and björk "birch tree".
Aðalbjörn m Icelandic
Derived from the Old Norse elements aðal "noble" and bjǫrn "bear" (making it a cognate of Adalbero).
Aðalbjört f Icelandic (Rare)
Derived from the Old Norse elements aðal meaning "noble" and bjǫrt meaning "bright, shining" (from bjartr).
Aðalborg f Faroese, Icelandic
Icelandic and Faroese form of Adalburg.
Aðalbrandr m Old Norse
Ancient Scandinavian form of Adalbrand.
Aðalbrikt m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Aðalbert (cf. modern German Albrecht, Ruprecht and modern Dutch Robrecht, Hubrecht)... [more]
Aðalbriktr m Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Albrikt.
Aðalfríður f Icelandic (Rare)
Derived from Icelandic aðal "noble" and fríðr "beautiful".
Aðalgeir m Icelandic, Faroese (Rare)
Icelandic and Faroese form of Æðelgar.
Athalhart m Old High German
Old High German form of Adalhard.
Aðalheiður f Icelandic, Faroese (Rare)
Icelandic and Faroese form of Adalheidis (see Adelaide).
Aðalmækir f Old Norse
Old Norse byname, from Old Norse AðalmækiR meaning "noble sword".
Athalmar m Germanic
Derived from Germanic adal meaning "noble" combined with Germanic mari meaning "famous".
Aðalráður m Icelandic (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from Icelandic aðal "noble" and ráð "advise", "counsel", "decision".
Athalric m Germanic
Derived from the Germanic name elements adal "noble" and rīhhi "noble, distinguished, rich".
Aðalríkr m Old Norse
Ancient Scandinavian form of Adalric.
Aðalrós f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the Old Norse element aðal meaning "noble" and Rós.
Aðalvaldr m Old Norse
Ancient Scandinavian form of Adalwald.
Athanarich m German
German form of Athanaric.
Athanarik m Dutch, Norwegian
Dutch and Norwegian form of Athanaric.
Atharv m Marathi
The name Atharv means the god Ganesh in Hinduism
Atharva m & f Indian, Hinduism
derived from vedic culture, Atharva-veda.... [more]
Atharvaa f & m Marathi, Indian
Variant of Atharva.
Atheer f & m Arabic (Arabized)
In Arabic, Atheer refers to the "luster/light which reflects off a sword."... [more]
Athénagorás m Czech
Czech form of Athenagoras, used to refer to Athenagoras of Athens. Not used as a given name.
Athenagoras m Ancient Greek
Derived from Greek Ᾰ̓θῆναι (Athenai) meaning "Athens (city)" (ultimately from the name of the goddess Athena) and either ἀγορά (agora) meaning "assembly, marketplace" or ἀγορεύω (agoreuo) meaning "to speak, proclaim, orate; to speak publicly"... [more]
Athénagorasz m Hungarian
Hungarian form of Athenagoras.
Athenodora f Ancient Greek
Feminine form of Athenodoros. This was used by American author Stephenie Meyer for a character in her novel Breaking Dawn (2008) of the Twilight series.
Ather m English (Rare)
Derived from the Old English name Æðelhere.
Ätheria f Literature, Late Roman (Germanized)
Germanised form of Etheria, from Ancient Greek αἰθήρ (aithḗr) 'purer upper air of the atmosphere; heaven, sky; theoretical medium supposed to fill unoccupied space and transmit heat and light', related to German Äther 'ether' and English ether.... [more]
Athinagoras m Greek
Modern Greek form of Athenagoras.
Athinodoros m Greek
Modern Greek form of Athenodoros.
Athir f Arabic
Means "beloved, darling" in Arabic.
Athirah f Malay
Derived from Arabic عطر ('athir) meaning "fragrant, sweet-smelling".
Athiratu f Ugaritic Mythology, Semitic Mythology
Ugaritic form of Asherah. She was worshipped under this name at her cult center in the city of Ugarit.
Athracht f Medieval Irish
Of uncertain origin and meaning, this name is usually Anglicized as Attracta. It was 'the name of an Irish virgin saint, of Ulster origin, who flourished in the 6th century and founded the nunnery of Killaraght, near Lough Gara, Co... [more]
Atinagora m Macedonian (Rare), Serbian (Rare)
Macedonian and Serbian form of Athenagoras.
Atinder f & m Indian (Sikh)
Atinder means the greatest god
Atipiri m Aymara
Means "winner, victor" in Aymara.
Atir f Uzbek
Means "perfume" in Uzbek.
Atira f New World Mythology
Etymology unknown. This was the name of the Pawnee earth goddess.
Atirah f Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Derived from Arabic عطر ('atir) meaning "fragrant, sweet-smelling, perfume".
Atkiray m Medieval Mongolian
Means "stallion" in Middle Mongolian, possibly related to Proto-Turkic *adgïr.
Ator f Assyrian
Assyrian
Atori f Japanese (Rare)
From 花鶏 (atori), referring to the brambling bird.... [more]
Atre m Coptic
Means "twin, doubled thing" in Coptic.
Atreas m Greek (Rare)
Modern Greek form of Atreus.
Atrej m Croatian
Croatian form of Atreus.
Atréju m Literature
Created by German author Michael Ende for the hero of his fantasy novel 'Die unendliche Geschichte' (1979; English: 'The Neverending Story'). The character is a boy warrior whose name is explained as meaning "son of all" in his fictional native language, given to him because he was raised by all of the members of his village after being orphaned as a newborn.
Atreo m Italian, Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Atreus.
Atreu m Catalan, Portuguese, Romanian
Catalan, Portuguese and Romanian form of Atreus.
Atrey m Bulgarian, Russian, Ukrainian
Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian form of Atreus.
Atreyu m Literature (Anglicized)
Anglicized variant of Atréju, which was created by German author Michael Ende for the hero of his fantasy novel 'Die unendliche Geschichte' (1979; English: 'The Neverending Story')... [more]
Atri m & f Finnish (Rare)
A Finnish short form of Adrian.
Atria f Astronomy
A star in the constellation Triangulum Australe
Atriana f Sicilian
Sicilian variant of Adriana.
Atrianu m Sicilian
Variant of Adrianu.
Atríðr m Norse Mythology, Old Norse
Means "attacker". This is a byname for Odin.
Atrnerseh m Ancient Armenian, Armenian (Archaic)
Armenian form of Adurnarseh, equivalent to ատր- (atr-) meaning "fire" combined with the given name Nerseh.
Atro m Finnish
A Finnish form of Hadrianus. Finnish name day March 4.
Atropates m Old Persian (Hellenized), History
Hellenized form of Āturpāt. This name was borne by a Persian satrap from the 4th century BC.
Atser m West Frisian
Variant of Edser.
Atsuharu m Japanese (Rare)
From 暖 (atsu) meaning "warm" and 理 (haru) meaning "logic, reason". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Atsuhiro m Japanese
Japanese masculine name derived from either 貴裕, meaning "precious; plentiful", 逸裕 meaning "escape, break free; plentiful" or 厚博 "thick and broad, rich, plentiful".
Atsuichiro m Japanese
Variant transcription of Atsuichirou.
Atsuichirou m Japanese
From Japanese 淳 (atsu) meaning "honest, simple, unsophisticated", 一 (ichi) meaning "one" combined with 郎 (rou) meaning "son". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Atsujiro m Japanese
Variant transcription of Atsujirou.
Atsujirou m Japanese
From Japanese 篤 (atsu) meaning "honest", 二 (ji) meaning "two" combined with 郎 (rou) meaning "son". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Atsunori m Japanese
From Japanese 渥 (atsu) meaning "moist" combined with 訓 (nori) meaning "teach, instruct". Other kanji combinations are also possible. ... [more]
Atsuro m Japanese
Variant transcription of Atsurou.
Atsurou m Japanese
From Japanese 篤 (atsu) meaning "honest" combined with 郎 (rou) meaning "son". Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Atsutaro m Japanese
Variant transcription of Atsurou.
Atsutarou m Japanese
From Japanese 宏 (atsu) meaning "wide, spacious, great, vast", 太 (ta) meaning "thick, big" combined with 郎 (rou) meaning "son". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Atsyrukhs f Ossetian Mythology, Ossetian (Rare)
From Ossetian ацы (atsy) meaning "present, real, true" and рухс (rukhs) meaning "light". This is the name of a character in the Nart sagas, the daughter of the god Khur.
Attagares f Guanche
From Guanche *hata-tagarest, meaning "here is the frost". This was recorded as the name of a 5-year-old Guanche girl from Tenerife who was sold at the slave market in Valencia in 1494.
Attagora f Guanche
Name borne by three Guanche women, aged 26, 28 and 30, who were sold at the slave market in Valencia in 1494.
Atteneri f Spanish (Canarian, Rare)
Guanche name meaning "here is the beautiful young woman", derived from the Guanche demonstrative *hata and *teneriht "gazelle", used here to mean "beautiful girl". This was recorded as the name of a 10-year-old Guanche girl from the island of Tenerife (present-day Canary Islands, Spain) who was sold at the slave market in Valencia in 1495... [more]
Attesora f Guanche
Borne by a 12-year-old Guanche girl presented for sale at the slave market in Valencia in 1495.
Attracta f Irish, Medieval Irish (Latinized), History (Ecclesiastical)
Latinized form of the Gaelic name Athracht, which is of uncertain meaning. The Latinization was perhaps influenced by attractus "attracted". This was the name of a 6th-century Irish saint who was known as a healer and miracle worker.
Aturinda m & f Eastern African, Nkore
Means "He -God- protects us" in Nkole, spoken in Uganda.
Āturpāt m Old Persian
Old Persian form of the Avestan name Ātarepāta (also found written as Āterepāta), which is derived from Avestan ātar "fire" combined with Avestan pāiti "to protect, to defend" or Avestan pāyu "protector"... [more]
Atvars m Latvian (Rare)
Directly taken from Latvian atvars "whirlpool, maelstrom".
Atvarðr m Norse Mythology, Old Norse
Means "defender" or "relative". This is the name of a dwarf in Norse mythology.
Atwater m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Atwater.
Atyrdakh m Yakut
Means "pitchfork" in Yakut.
Atyrgul f Kyrgyz
Means "rose" from Kyrgyz атыр (atyr) meaning "perfume, fragrance" (of Arabic origin) and гүл (gül) meaning "flower".
Atziri f Mexican
Variant of Ahtziri.
Aubakir m Kazakh
Probably derived from Arabic أَبُو (ʾabū) meaning "father (of)" and بكير (bakir) "learner, student" or بَكَرَ (bakara) meaning "to get up early" (figuratively meaning "early ripened" (in knowledge) or "quickly learned")... [more]
Auberée f Medieval French
Feminine form of Auberi and Old French form of Albreda, recorded several times in the Paris of 1292.
Aubéric m French
Variant form of Albéric.
Aubèrt m Gascon, Norman, Jèrriais
Gascon, Norman and Jèrriais form of Aubert.
Auberta f Provençal, Niçard
Niçard feminine form of Aubert.
Aubertin m Medieval French
Middle French diminutive of Aubert.
Aubertina f Provençal, Niçard
Niçard variant of Albertina.
Auberto m Italian, Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Aubert.
Aubra f English
Elaboration of Aubrey.
Aubraham m Scots
Scots form of Abraham.
Aubrèa f Gascon
Gascon form of Albreda.
Aubrei f English
Variant of Aubrey.
Aubrelle f Obscure
Not available.
Aubri f American
Variant of Aubrey.
Aubriann f English
Variant spelling of Aubrianne.
Aubrianne f English
Combination of Aubrey and Anne 1.
Aubriella f English
Combination of Aubrey and the suffix -ella.
Aubrieta f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Aubrey. Also from the "trailing purple-flowered plant."
Aubrilyn f English (Modern)
Aubrey, but with the popular -lyn suffix.
Aubrilynn f English (Modern)
Aubrey, but with the popular -lynn suffix.
Audar m Norwegian (Rare)
Derived from the Old Norse elements auðr "wealth, fortune" and arr "warrior".
Audbjørn m Norwegian (Rare)
Derived from the Old Norse elements auðr "wealth, fortune" and bjǫrn "bear".
Audéarde f Medieval French
Medieval French variant of Hildegarde.
Audebert m Provençal, Niçard
Niçard form of Aldebert.
Auderic m Medieval French, Gascon
Medieval French and Gascon form of Alderic.
Auderic m Germanic
Derived from the Germanic element auda "wealth, property" (also see Audovacar) combined with rîcja "powerful, strong, mighty." The second element is also closely related to Celtic rîg or rix and Gothic reiks, which all mean "king, ruler."
Audery f English (American)
Variant of Audrey. From 1880 to 2018, the Social Security Administration has recorded 495 babies born with the first name Audery in the United States.
Audgar m Norwegian
Variant of Audgard. This was the middle name of comedian and actor Åsleik Engmark (1965-2017).
Audgeir m Norwegian (Archaic)
Derived from the Old Norse elements auðr "wealth, fortune" and geirr "spear".
Audgerd f Old Norwegian
Norwegian form of Auðgærðr.
Audiarda f Medieval Occitan, Gascon, Lengadocian
Gascon and Languedocian feminine form of Edward.
Audibrand m Provençal
Provençal form of Hildebrand.
Audierna f Provençal
Provençal form of Hodierna.
Audigerna f Germanic
West Germanic name composed from *aud "wealth, riches, fortune" and gern "eager, willing"; for the second element, cf. Gothic cognate *gairns, which can also mean "desirous, covetous".... [more]
Audoard m Old High German
Combination of ot "property" and wart "guard".
Audoard m Lengadocian, Gascon
Languedocian and Gascon form of Edward.
Audogar m Germanic
The first element of this Germanic name is derived from the Germanic element auda "wealth, property" (also see Audovacar). The second element is derived from Gothic gairu (gêr in Old High German) "spear", or from garva (garo in Old High German, and gearu in Anglo-Saxon) "ready, prepared."
Audoir m French (Archaic)
Variant form of Audoire.
Audomar m Germanic, History (Ecclesiastical)
Variant of Audamar (see Otmar). This was the name of a Frankish saint from the 7th century AD.
Audomaro m Italian
Italian form of Audomarus.
Audomarus m Germanic (Latinized), History (Ecclesiastical)
Latinized form of Audomar. This was the name of a Frankish saint from the 7th century AD.
Audouard m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Aldward.
Audouard m Provençal
Provençal form of Édouard.
Audr m & f English (Rare), Old Norse (Americanized, Rare)
Derived from the Norse name Auðr meaning “wealth, fortune”. It was americanized for easier understanding and writing.
Audralina f Obscure
Elaboration of Audra 2 using popular suffix -lina.
Audre f English
Variant of Audrey, borne by Audre Lorde.
Audrèa f Provençal
Provençal form of Audrey.
Audree f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audrei f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audrèia f Lengadocian, Gascon
Languedocian and Gascon form of Audrey.
Audreina f Obscure
Variant of Audrina.
Audrèio f Provençal
Provençal form of Audrey.
Audrélie f French (Quebec, Rare)
Combination of either Audrey or Aude and Aurélie.
Audren m & f Breton Legend, Medieval Breton, Breton (Modern)
Medieval Breton form of Aodren which was revived in the 1970s. While this name was strictly masculine in medieval times, in modern times it is used on men and women alike.... [more]
Audrena f Breton (Rare)
Strictly feminine form of Audren.
Audrene f English
Blend of Audrey and the name suffix ene.
Audri f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audria f English
Variant of Audrea.
Audriana f English (American, Modern)
An invented name, a combination of Audrey and Adriana.
Audrianne f English
An elaboration of Audrey, or a combination of Audrey and Anne 1.
Audrie f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audriel f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Possibly a combination of Audrey and Ariel (or other names ending in -riel), it first appeared in the SSA in 2003 with 5 occurrences... [more]
Audriella f Obscure
Combination of Audrey and the suffix -ella.
Audrienne f Obscure
Possibly a variant of Adrienne or an elaboration of Audrey.
Audrietta f Obscure
Elaboration of Audrey with the suffix -etta
Audrina f American (Modern)
Elaboration of Audrey with the popular name suffix -ina. ... [more]
Audrique m & f American (Modern, Rare)
Variant form of Audry.
Audrius m Lithuanian
Masculine form of Audra 1.
Audriy f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audronė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Audronis.
Audronis m Lithuanian
Derived from the Lithuanian noun audra meaning "storm" (see Audra 1) combined with the (masculine) patronymic suffix -onis.
Audros m Lithuanian, Mythology
The god of storms in Lithuanian mythology / storms in lithuanian.
Audrun f Norwegian (Rare)
Norwegian form of Auðrún.
Audrūnas m Lithuanian (Rare)
Derived from the Lithuanian noun audra meaning "storm" (see Audra 1) combined with the (masculine) patronymic suffix -ūnas.
Audrutė f Lithuanian
Most likely a diminutive of Audra 1.
Audry m French, French (Belgian)
French form of Aldric via Audric.
Audrye f English
Variant of Audrey.
Audrynna f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Audryna. According to the SSA, Audrynna was given to 6 girls in 2012.
Audvard m Norwegian (Archaic)
Combination of the Old Norse name elements auðr "prosperity, fortune, riches" and vǫrðr "guard", making it a cognate of Edward.
Auer m Norwegian (Archaic)
Dialectal form of Alver recorded in the Telemark and Agder regions.
Auffra f Medieval German
Possibly a variant of Afra 1.
Aufrèd m Occitan
Variant of Alfrèd.
Aufrej m Piedmontese
Piedmontese form of Alfredo.
Aufrica f Manx
Manx form of Aifric.
Aufroy m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Alfried, which is a short form of Adalfried and thus not to be confused with Alfred... [more]
Auger m Gascon
Possibly a Gascon form of Adalgar.
Augerinos m Greek, Greek Mythology
Derived from Greek ah (auge) meaning "sunlight, ray of light" or "dawn". This is sometimes used as a name for the planet Venus, the morning star.
Augur m Ancient Roman
Roman cognomen which was derived from the Latin noun augur meaning "augur, diviner, seer".... [more]
Augure m French (Archaic), Italian
French and Italian form of Augurius.
Auguri m Catalan
Catalan form of Augurius.
Auguria f Ancient Roman, Spanish
Feminine form of Augurius (Roman) and Augurio (Spanish).
Augurio m Italian (Archaic), Spanish
Italian and Spanish form of Augurius.
Augurius m Ancient Roman, History (Ecclesiastical)
Roman cognomen which was derived from the Latin adjective augurius meaning "of an augur" (see Augur).... [more]
Aulaire f French (Archaic), Provençal
Early vernacular form of Eulalia, which survives in the French place name Saint-Aulaire, given in reference to the popular Spanish saint Eulalia of Mérida.
Aulanerk f Inuit Mythology
In Inuit mythology, Aulanerk is a friendly sea goddess who rules over the tides, waves and joy.
Aulàri m Provençal
Provençal masculine form of Eulalie.
Aularia f Medieval Catalan
Medieval Catalan cognate of Aulaire, recorded in 15th-century Valencia.
Aulir m Old Norse
Variant of AlvéR.