Submitted Names with 2 Syllables

This is a list of submitted names in which the number of syllables is 2.
gender
usage
syllables
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Tsadia f Asturian (Archaic)
Asturian form of Ladia.
Tsadio m Asturian (Archaic)
Asturian form of Ladio.
Tsafrir m Hebrew
Variant of Tzafrir.
Tsagaan f & m Mongolian
Means "white" in Mongolian.
Tsahi m Hebrew (Modern)
A popular diminutive for names like Itzhak and Tsach
Tschena f Romansh
Romansh diminutive of Christina as well as the feminine form of Vincent.
Tsedef f & m Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Means "shell" in Hebrew, making it relative to the Arabic name Sadaf.
Tselha f & m Tibetan
Tselha is a unisex name of Tibetan origin. It's comprised of ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and ལྷ (lha) meaning "god/dess."
Tsengel m & f Mongolian
Means "joy, happiness, celebration" in Mongolian.
Tsereg m & f Mongolian
Means "knight, soldier, army" in Mongolian.
Tsewang m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚེ་དབང (see Tshewang).
Tshewang m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan ཚེ་དབང (tshe-dbang) meaning "powerful life, power of a long life", from ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and དབང (dbang) "power".
Tshomo f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Alternate transcription of Tibetan མཚོ་མོ (see Tsomo).
Tshulthrim m & f Bhutanese, Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tshultrim m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (tshul-khrims) meaning "conduct, ethics, morality".
Tsillah f Hebrew
Rare variant spelling of Zillah.
Tsion m & f Hebrew (Modern)
Variant of Tzion, used for both males and females.
Tsira f Mingrelian, Georgian
Derived from Mingrelian ცირა (cira) meaning "girl" or "daughter".
Tsoalo f & m Sotho
Means "birth".
Tsolak m Armenian
From Old Armenian ցոլ (cʿol) "shine" + -ակ (-ak), a diminutive suffix.
Tsomo f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan མཚོ་མོ (mtsho-mo) meaning "lake, ocean".
Tsotne m Georgian
Either derived from Georgian ცოტა (tsota) meaning "a little, few" or from Georgian მცოდნე (mtsodne) meaning "able, adept".... [more]
Tsugu m Japanese
From 禎 (tsugu) meaning "divine grace, auspicious, straightforward", 亜 (a, tsugu) meaning “second, Asia, sub-”, or 次 (ji, tsugu) meaning "next". Other kanji or kanji combinations are possible.
Tsuka f Japanese
From Japanese 摘 (tsu) meaning "to pluck; to pick" combined with 花 (ka) meaning "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsukane f & m Japanese (Rare)
This name is used as 束 (soku, taba, taba.neru, tsuka, tsuka.neru, tsukane) meaning "bundle."... [more]
Tsukashi m Japanese (Rare)
From 司 (tsukasa) meaning "office," modelled on other names ending with -shi, like Hiroshi, Kiyoshi and Takashi.... [more]
Tsuki f Japanese
Means "moon" in Japanese.
Tsukihi f Japanese (Modern, Rare)
From 月日 (tsukihi), literally meaning "moon and sun," though it can also refer to time, years or days.... [more]
Tsukit f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Alternate transcription of Hebrew צוקית (see Tzukit).
Tsukuru m Japanese
From verb 作る/造る/創る (tsukuru) meaning "to make, build, construct; to raise, cultivate; to till, etc."... [more]
Tsukushi f Japanese (Modern), Popular Culture
Means "horsetail (plant)" in Japanese from 土筆 (tsukushi). Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Tsultim m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tsultrim m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས (see Tshultrim).
Tsuma m Japanese
From Japanese 妻 (tsuma) meaning "wife", 津 (tsu) meaning "haven, port, harbor, ferry" or 都 (tsu) meaning "capital (city)" combined with 摩 (ma) meaning "chafe, rub, polish, grind, scrape" or 万 (ma) meaning "very many"... [more]
Tsume f & m Japanese (Rare), Popular Culture
Means "claw" in Japanese.... [more]
Tsutako f Japanese
From Tsuta combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child."
Tsutau m Japanese
From classical verb 伝う/傳う (tsutau), modern tsutaeru, meaning "to go/walk along."
Tsu'tey m Popular Culture
This is the name of one of the characters that is featured in the Avatar franchise.
Tsutomu m Japanese
From classical verbs 勤む (tsutomu) meaning "to work (for), serve (in)," 務む (tsutomu) meaning "to serve/act (as), play the role (of)" or 努む/勉む/力む (tsutomu) meaning "to endeavour, try, strive, make an effort," all of these verbs rendered today as tsutomeru... [more]
Tsuyo f Japanese
From Japanese 津 (tsu) meaning "haven, port, harbor, ferry" or 都 (tsu) meaning "capital (city)" combined with 代 (yo) meaning "generation". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsybik m & f Buryat (Russified)
Russified form of the Buryat name Цэбэг (Tsebeg) or Сэбэг (Sebeg) meaning "eternal, immortal, undying", ultimately from Tibetan ཚེ་དཔག (tshe-dpag).
Ttalgi f Korean (Modern, Rare)
From native Korean 딸기 (ttalgi) meaning "strawberry."
Tua f Swedish, Finland Swedish, Danish (Rare)
Origin uncertain, possibly a variant of Tova 2, a feminine form of Tue or a short form of Perpetua... [more]
Tuding f Filipino
Very common diminutive of Gertrudes.
Tudno m Medieval Breton, Welsh (Rare)
Possibly a combination of Welsh tut "people" and -no "knowing"
Tueanchai m & f Thai
Means "memorable, recognisable" or "remind, call to mind" in Thai.
Tufan m Turkish
Means "deluge, storm" in Turkish, ultimately from Arabic طُوفَان (ṭūfān).
Tuga f Croatian (Rare), Slavic Mythology
Means "sadness" in Croatian. According to a folk tradition, she and her sister Buga, together with their five brothers Klukas, Lobel, Kosenc, Muhlo and Hrvat, led the Croats into the ancient Roman province of Dalmatia in the 7th century.
Tugi m Mongolian
Possibly a short form of Tuguslar.
Tuike f Finnish (Rare)
Means "twinkle, glimmer" in Finnish.
Tuisco m Germanic Mythology
Alternate reading of Tuisto.
Tuisku f & m Finnish
From Finnish tuisku meaning "snowstorm".
Tuisto m Germanic Mythology
The name of a Germanic Earth god mentioned once in the work of Tacitus. One manuscript of Tacitus provides the alternate name form Tuisco.
Tulan m & f Chinese (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Tu and Lan 1.
Tulasi f & m Indian, Odia, Hindi, Telugu, Kannada, Nepali
Alternate transcription of Tulsi.
Tulga f German (Austrian, Modern, Rare)
Maybe from Gothic tulgus "firm, steady, solid".
Tulga m Germanic
From Gothic tulgus "firm, steady, solid".... [more]
Tulip f English (Rare)
From the name of the flower. Ultimately from Persian dulband, "turban", from the shape of the opened flower.... [more]
Tulsa f English (American, Rare)
From the name of the city and county in the US state of Oklahoma which comes from Tallasi, meaning "old town" in the Creek.
Tulsi f & m Hinduism, Indian, Bengali, Hindi, Nepali
From Sanskrit तुलसी (tulasī) meaning "holy basil (a type of plant)". The plant is considered sacred in Hinduism, and it is sometimes personified as an avatar of Lakshmi.
Tulus m Javanese, Indonesian
Means "righteous, upright, sincere" in Javanese.
Tumas m Arabic, Somali
Arabic form of Thomas.
Tumnus m Literature (Rare)
The name of a faun in C.S. Lewis' novels, the Chronicles of Narnia. This may be used as a diminutive of Vertumnus.
Tuncer m Turkish
Composed from Turkish tunç ''bronze'' and er "brave; man".
Tunggal m Javanese
Means "one, single" in Javanese.
Tunjung f Javanese, Indonesian
Means "water lily" or "lotus" in Javanese and Indonesian.
Tunne m Estonian
Form of Tauno. It also coincides with the Estonian word for "to touch".
Tunwa m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thanwa.
Tunya f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai ธัญญา (see Thanya).
Tuomma m Sami
Variant of Duommá.
Tuovi f & m Finnish
Derived from the place name Tuovila "village of Tove", a village in Finland. It was invented by the Finnish author Yrjö Sakari Yrjö-Koskinen for a character of his novel "Pohjan-Piltti" (1859).
Tura f American
Noted bearer is American actress Tura Satana (1938-2011), born Suvaki to a Japanese-Filipino father and Cheyenne-Scots-Irish mother. She said of her names: 'Suvaki means "white chameleon" or "white flower" in Japanese, but in Cheyenne it's Tura'... [more]
Turing m & f Filipino
Diminutive of Arturo, Victoria, and other names containing -tur- or -tor-.
Turpal m Chechen
Means "hero" in Chechen. This is the name of the legendary ancestor of the Chechen people, who is also called Nokhcho.
Tuti f Hebrew
Diminutive of Reut.
Tuti f Ottoman Turkish
Means "parrot", derived from Persian.
Tuti f Persian
Meaning: ? An old fashioned Iranian name, perhaps related to توت meaning "berries".
Tutu m & f Western African, South African
Means "cliff dweller".
Tutut f Javanese
Means "tame, submissive, docile" in Javanese.
Tuulo m & f Finnish, Estonian
Variant or masculine form of Tuuli and Tuulikki.
Tuvia m Hebrew
Variant transcription of Tovia.
Tuyu m Newar
Means "white" in Newar.
Twana m Kurdish
From Persian توانا (tavânâ) meaning "powerful".
Twanda f African American (Rare)
Combination of Twana with the popular suffix da, inspired by names like Shawnda and Wanda.
Tweedy m English (Rare)
Transferred from the surname Tweedy. Some famous bearers of this name are American rapper Tweedy Bird Loc (1967-2020) and English doctor Tweedy John Todd (1789-1840).
Tweety m & f Popular Culture, Various (Rare)
Wordplay on the words sweetie and tweet, the onomatopoeia of birds. This is the name of Warner Bros. character Tweety, a yellow canary who began to appear in Looney Tunes (1930) and Merrie Melodies (1931) series of animated cartoons... [more]
Twilight f & m American (Modern, Rare)
From the English word referring to the time of day when the sun is just below the horizon. Ultimately from Old English twi- "half" + līht "light".... [more]
Twinkle f English (Rare)
From the English word "twinkle", ultimately from Old English twincan, "to blink".
Twyford m English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Twyford.
Tyano m Filipino, Tagalog
Diminutive of Graciano, Luciano, Sebastián and similar names.
Tybee f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Allegedly from the name of an island off the Georgia (U.S. state) coast, which is said to mean "salt" in Yuchi.
Tychelle f African American (Rare)
Blending of the phonetic element ty and Michelle.
Tyger m Literature, English
Older form of Tiger, used by William Blake in his poem 'The Tyger' (1794).
Tyiese f African American (Modern, Rare)
Modern name, possibly based on Thais or Tyrese.
Tyjae m & f African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the phonetic elements ty and jay. It can be spelled Tyjae or with a capitalized third letter as TyJae.
Tyjah m & f African, African American (Modern)
Apparently means "smart" in one of the languages on the African continent. However, the name can also be derived from the name abbreviation (or initials) T.J., which is typically pronounced as "tee-jay" and its pronunciation henceforth developed into a first name of its own right (Teejay).
Tyjuan m African American (Rare)
Combination of the popular phonetic prefix ty and Juan 1.
Tyke m Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Archaic)
From the Old Norse name Týki, a diminutive of Þórketill (making it a variant of Tóki; see Toki)... [more]
Tylee f & m English (African, Modern, Rare)
Combination of the phonetic elements ty and lee.
Tyleen f American (Modern, Rare)
Perhaps intended to be a feminine form of Tyler, influenced by similar-sounding names such as Eileen.
Tylie f English (Modern, Rare)
Perhaps a rhyming variant of Kylie blending it with Ty or a variant of Tylee.
Tylos m Greek Mythology
Possibly from Ancient Greek τύλος (tylos) meaning "callus" or "knob, knot". Tylos is a mythological character in Nonnus' epic poem Dionysiaca, where he accidentally touches a serpent which attacks and suffocates him... [more]
Tymish m Ukrainian
Ukrainian diminutive or folk form of Tymofiy. Tymish Khmelnytskyi was hetman Bohdan Khmelnytskyi's eldest son and projected successor, who was killed at the age of 20 in one of his Moldovan campaigns.
Tynan m English (Australian, Rare), Irish
Variation of the transferred use of the surname Tuíneán.
Tyner m English (American, Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Tyner.
Typha f American (Rare, Archaic)
Genus of the cattail plant. Derived from Greek typhos, meaning "marsh".
Tyras m Biblical Hebrew
The name is a derivative of Tiras who was one of Noah’s grandsons. Specifically Japheth’s son.
Tyreece m African American (Rare)
Variant of Tyrese, influenced by Reece.
Tyrel m English
Variant of Tyrell.
Tyri f Norwegian (Rare), Swedish (Rare)
From the Ancient Scandinavian name Þýri.
Tyrus m English, African American, Popular Culture
Transferred use of the surname Tyrus, or modern blend of Tyrone and Cyrus... [more]
Tysha f African American (Rare)
Combination of the popular phonetic elements ty and sha, possibly modelled on Tasha... [more]
Tyshae f African American (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the popular phonetic elements ty and shay.
Tyshea f African American (Rare)
Variant of Tyshae or sometimes Tyshia.
Tytan m American
Variant of Titan.
Tywin m Literature, Popular Culture
The name of a character in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series of fantasy novels. He is the patriarch of House Lannister, and father of Jaime, Cersei, and Tyrion.
Tyyni f Finnish
A rarer variant on Tyyne, means "calm". Nameday on September 18th.
Tyyra f Finnish
Finnish spelling of Tyra
Tzeni f Greek
Greek form of Jenny, used as a diminutive of Evgenia.
Tzeril f Yiddish
Tzeril is the Yiddish diminutive form of Sarah meaning 'princess'. When an 'e' is added to the end of the name, it adds the meaning 'little', which is an endearment.
Tzipi f Hebrew, Yiddish
Diminutive of Tzipporah. A notable bearer is Israeli politician Tziporah 'Tzipi' Livni (1958-).
Tzlil f & m Hebrew
Variant of the name Tslil which means "sound; voice" in Hebrew.
Tzukit f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Tzuk. This is also the Hebrew word for a type of bird, the rock thrush (genus Monticola).
Tzuri m & f English (Rare), Hebrew (Rare)
Variant of Zuri or Zurie influenced by the Hebrew name Tzuri'el
Tzvika m Hebrew
Diminutive of Tzvi.
Tzvior m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the names Tzvi and Or meaning "gazelle of light" or "bright gazelle" in Hebrew.
Uaichai m & f Thai
From Thai อวย (uai) meaning "grant, give" and ชัย (chai) meaning "victory".
Uainín f Irish
Means "little lamb" in Irish.
Ualtar m Irish (Rare)
Irish form of Walter.
Ubax f Somali
Means "flower" or "blossom" in Somali.
Ubejd m Albanian
Albanian form of Ubaid.
Ubol f Thai
Alternate transcription of Ubon.
Ubul m Hungarian (Rare)
Old Hungarian form of Hugbald.
Uchka f Mongolian
Possibly a nickname.
Uchū m & f Japanese (Rare)
From 宇宙 (uchū) meaning "universe, cosmos, space."... [more]
Uda f Bontoc (Rare)
Variant of Oda.
Uday m Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Odia
From Sanskrit उदय (ud-ayá) meaning "rise, ascend" or "sunrise".
Udel f Yiddish (Anglicized)
Either from the German Adel meaning "noble" or from Hodel a diminutive of Hudes. Udel (1720-1787), the righteous daughter of the Ba'al Shem Tov, was a historical bearer of this name.
Udhav m Indian, Nepali
Variant of Uddhav.
Udom m Thai
Means "plentiful, abundant" or "highest, best" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit उत्तम (uttama).
Udval f Mongolian
Means "aquilegia, columbine" in Mongolian. Can also refer to chrysanthemum flowers.
Uel m English
Short form of Samuel used in Northern Ireland.
U-eun f Korean
From Sino-Korean 宇 (u) meaning "house, eaves, universe" combined with 恩 (eun) meaning "kindness, mercy, charity"
U-Fan m & f Korean (Rare)
Variant transcription of Korean Hangul 우환 (see U-Hwan).
Uffa m Anglo-Saxon
Variant of Offa and Wuffa.
Uffert m West Frisian
Variant form of Offert.
Üffes m Popular Culture
This name started as a joke about the mispronounciation of the foreign name Yves by some people in Germany. Due to the proliferation of the joke, it has become a nickname for Yves.
Ugbad f Somali
The meaning is a "Bouquet of Roses". It is a new name, people used it as a very advanced language term of the meaning.
Ugnius m Lithuanian
From Lithuanian ugnis meaning "fire" (compare its feminine form Ugnė).
Ugo m & f Igbo
Means "eagle" in Igbo. It is also a short form of names containing the element ùgó.
Ugrin m Serbian (Rare)
An ethnonym meaning "Hungarian".
Ugutz m Basque
Derived from Basque ugutz "baptism" and used as a Basque equivalent of Bautista.
Ugyen m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From ཨོ་རྒྱན (o-rgyan), the Tibetan name for the medieval Indian state of Oddiyana, which was significant due to its role in the development of Vajrayana Buddhism.
U-Hwan m & f Korean (Rare)
From Korean 宇 (u) meaning "house, roof", 旴 (u) meaning "sunrise", 雨 (u) meaning "rain", 佑 (u), 祐 (u), both meaning "to help", 瑀 (u), 玗 (u), both meaning "jade", 友 (u) meaning "friend", 昱 (u) meaning "sunlight", 煜 (u) meaning "shining; brilliant", 優 (u) meaning "generous; soft", 羽 (u) meaning "feather, wing", or 禹 (U) meaning "Yu the Great", the legendary king of the Xia Dynasty combined with 桓 (hwan) meaning "sapling", 奐 (hwan) meaning "to be numerous, brilliant", 煥 (hwan) meaning "brilliant; shining, lustrous", 晥 (hwan) meaning "bright, morning star", or 歡 (hwan) meaning "happy".... [more]
U-hyeok m Korean
From Sino-Korean 佑 "help, protect, bless" and 赫 "bright, radiant, glowing".
Ui f Japanese
From Japanese 愛 (u) meaning "love, affection" combined with 衣 (i) meaning "clothes". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Uinsean m Irish (Rare)
Irish form of Vincent.
Ujjal m Bengali
From Sanskrit उज्ज्वल (ujjvala) meaning "luminous, splendid, blazing, burning".
Ujjval m Hindi
Alternate transcription of Hindi उज्ज्वल (see Ujjwal).
Ujjwal m Bengali, Hindi
Variant of Ujjal.
Uka f Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (u) meaning "feathers" combined with 唄 (ka) meaning "song". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Uki f Japanese
The meaning of the name is "Floating" Other names include Uke or in Japan 受け
Ukon m & f Japanese
This name is used as 右近 with 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right" and 近 (kin, kon, chika.i) meaning "akin, early, near, tantamount."... [more]
Ukrit m Thai
Means "supreme, highest" in Thai.
Uku m Estonian, Baltic Mythology
Estonian cognate of Finnish Ukko. This name is borne by the god of weather and lightning in Estonian mythology.
Ukyō m & f Japanese
This name can be used as 右京, 右恭, 侑京, 宇京, 宇郷, 宇恭, 宇響, 羽京, 羽恭 or 羽響 with 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right", 侑 (u, yuu, susu.meru, tasu.keru) meaning "urge to eat", 宇 (u) meaning "eaves, heaven, house, roof", 羽 (u, ha, hane, wa) meaning "feathers", 京 (kyou, kin, kei, miyako) meaning "capital", 恭 (kyou, uyauya.shii) meaning "respect, reverent", 郷 (kyou, gou, sato) meaning "district, home town, native place, village" and 響 (kyou, hibi.ku) meaning "echo, resound, ring, sound, vibrate."... [more]
Ūla f Lithuanian
Derived from Ūla, which is the name of a river in Dzūkija National Park (located near the villages of Marcinkonys and Merkinė) in southern Lithuania. In turn, the river derives its name from the Baltic root aul-, which comes from Proto-Indo-European *aulo-s or *h₂eulos meaning "tube, pipe"... [more]
Ulaan f & m Mongolian
Means "red" in Mongolian.
Ulan m Kalmyk
Means "red" in Kalmyk.
Ulchel m Medieval Scottish
Medieval Scottish form of Ulfkell.
Ulduz f & m Azerbaijani
Means "star" in Azerbaijani.
Ulfa f German (Rare)
Feminine form of Ulf.
Ulfa f Arabic (Rare), Indonesian
Means "intimacy, familiarity, harmony, agreement" in Arabic.
Ulfkell m Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Úlfkell.
Ulfo m German (Rare), Low German
Short form of names beginning in Ulf- like Ulfhard.... [more]
Ulfric m English (Rare), Popular Culture
Derived from the Germanic elements wulf "wolf" and rik "power; ruler".... [more]
Ulhas m Marathi
Means "joy" in Marathi.
Uljas m Finnish, Estonian
Derived from Finnish uljas "proud, noble, valiant". This is also a Finnish translation of Greek Ptolemaios.
Ulla m Biblical Hebrew
An Asherite mentioned in 1 Chronicles 7:39 in the Bible.... [more]
Ulla f Galician (Rare)
Transferred use of the name of the Galician river Ulla, itself from the Proto-Indo-European root *uei- meaning "to twist" after the meandring character of the river.
Ullrich m German
Variant of Ulrich.
Ulma f American (Rare, Archaic)
Maybe a variant of Alma 1.
Ulpu f Finnish
Derived from the Finnish word ulpukka, "spatterdock". It can also be used as a pet form of Ulla or Ulriikka.
Ulryk m Polish
Polish form of Ulrich.
Ultan m English, Irish
Anglicised form of Ultán.
Ulu f Igbo
Given for the second-born female.
Uly m English
Short form of Ulysses.
Ulzhan f Kazakh
From Kazakh ұл (ul) meaning "son, boy" and жан (zhan) meaning "soul". This name was traditionally given to girls in hopes that the family's next child would be a boy.
Umair m Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic عمير (see Umayr), as well as the Urdu form.
Umang m Indian
HINDU NAME!
Umayr m Arabic
Means "populous, prosperous, flourishing" in Arabic, from the word عَمَرَ ('amara) meaning "to live long, to thrive". This was the name of a companion of the Prophet Muhammad.
Umi f Japanese
Means "sea, ocean" in Japanese.
Umi f Indonesian, Malay
Means "mother" in Indonesian and Malay, ultimately from Arabic أم ('umm).
Umit f Kazakh
Means "hope" in Kazakh, ultimately from Persian امید (omid).
Umme f Arabic
Umme is an Indian name meaning “mother of sons”. Related names include Ummi and Umm.
Umon m Japanese
This name combines 右 (u, yuu, migi) meaning "right" or 宇 (u) meaning "eaves, heaven, house, roof" with 門 (mon, kado, to) meaning "gate."... [more]
Una f Croatian
Either inspired by the name of the river Una (bordering Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina), whose meaning is uncertain but could be from Latin una "(female) one", or directly from Latin. It's a modern name, used since the 20th century.
Unam m Korean
From Sino-Korean 牛 (u) meaning "cow, heifer, bull", combined with 男 (nam) meaning "male". This name can be formed using other hanja combinations as well.
Unas m Ancient Egyptian
From Egyptian wnjs, possibly meaning "who exists indeed", derived from wnn "to exist" and js, an intensifying particle. This was the throne name of the last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt during the Old Kingdom.
Uncas m Algonquian, Literature, Popular Culture
Derived from the Mohegan word wonkus meaning "fox". This was a character in 'The Last of the Mohicans' book and film.
Unchi f Japanese
From Japanese 雲 (un) meaning "cloud" combined with 智 (chi) meaning "knowledge, wisdom". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Undang f Filipino, Tagalog
Diminutive of Segunda.
Unday f Filipino
Diminutive of Segunda. A bearer of this nickname was Segunda Katigbak, the first love of Philippine national hero Jose Rizal.
Unggul m Javanese
Means "superior, highest, best" in Javanese.
Unhei f Korean
Means "grace" in Korean.
Unko f Japanese
From Japanese 運 (un) meaning "to drive" combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Unku f Romani, Literature
Derived from the German word Unke "toad". ... [more]
Unna f Old Norse, Danish (Rare), Faroese, Icelandic (Rare), Swedish (Rare), Finnish (Rare)
Derived from Old Norse unna "to love" or unnr "wave".
Unni f Sanskrit
Name: Unni उन्नी... [more]
Unnop m Thai
Alternate transcription of Annop.
Unruean f Thai
From Thai อุ่น (un) meaning "warm" and เรือน (ruean) meaning "house".
Unto m Finnish
Short form of Untamo.
Untung m Indonesian
Means "gain, profit, benefit" in Indonesian.
Unus m Medieval Latin, Medieval German (Latinized)
Directly taken from Latin unus "one".
Uny f English (Archaic)
Diminutive of Eunice.
Upė f Lithuanian (Modern)
Derived from the Lithuanian noun upė meaning "river, stream".
Upeng f Filipino
Diminitive of Cleofe, Eufemia, and other names containing a similar sound.
Upi m & f Finnish
A diminutive of Urpo, also used as a nickname for other names starting with U.
Ura f Japanese
From Japanese 有 (u) meaning "exist" combined with 楽 (ra) meaning "comfort, ease". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Urai f Thai
Means "gold" in Thai.
Uram m Hebrew
Variant of Uri, meaning 'my flame, my light'.
Uran f Japanese
From Japanese 汐 (u), meaning "tide, salt water", combined with 蘭 (ran), meaning "orchid, aroma". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Urgyen m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཨོ་རྒྱན (see Ugyen).
Uri f & m Korean
Means "we, us, our" in Korean.
Urin f Japanese
From Japanese 雨 (u) meaning "rain" combined with 凛 (rin) meaning "dignified, severe, cold". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Urip m & f Javanese, Indonesian
Means "to live, to be alive" in Javanese.
Urja f Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati
Means "energy, vigour, strength" in Sanskrit.
Urjin m Sanskrit
MEANING : possessing strength, fertile, exuberant ... [more]
Urko m Basque (Modern)
From the name of a mountain in Gipuzkoa and Bizkaia. The origin of the name is uncertain: it could derive from urki "birch" or, more unlikely, from urkamendi "gallows".
Urmet m Estonian
Variant of Urmas.
Urmi f Indian, Bengali
Means "wave, billow" in Sanskrit.
Urmil f & m Indian, Hindi, Bengali, Odia
Variant and masculine form of Urmila.
Urooj f & m Persian
Urooj is a Persian unisex name, meaning "rising, mounting, exaltation, ascension".
Urpo m Finnish
Finnish form of Urban.
Urquhart m Literature
Transferred use of the surname Urquhart. Used as a male name by J.K. Rowling in the "Harry Potter" books.
Ursie f English (British)
Chiefly British diminutive of Ursula.
Urso m Medieval German, Medieval French, Medieval Italian, Medieval Portuguese, Medieval Spanish, Medieval English (Rare), Swiss (Archaic)
Form of Urs in several languages. It was borne by a martyr in the 3rd century and two French and Italian saints in the 6th century.
Ursyn m Polish
Polish form of Ursinus. This name was borne by Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz (1757-1841), Polish playwright, poet and novelist.
Urte f German
Of debated origin and meaning.
Urwen f Literature
The name means "Fire Maiden", it comes from the Sindarin words ur "fire" and -wen "maiden". ... [more]
Ury m Medieval English, Medieval German
Medieval English and medieval German form of Uriah.
Usa f Thai
Means "dawn, aurora" in Thai, ultimately from Sanskrit उषस् (ushas).
Usain m English, Caribbean
Probably a form of Husayn. Usain Bolt is a Jamaican runner who broke the world record in the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
Uschla f German
Hypocoristic form of Ursula.
U-seok m Korean
Combination of an u hanja, like 雨 meaning "rain," 佑 meaning "help, assist," 祐 meaning "help, aid; luck, good fortune," 禹 meaning "wage" or 宇 meaning "house," and a seok hanja, such as 錫 meaning "tin; copper," 碩 meaning "big, large, great; full; faithful, devoted" or 奭 meaning "big, large, great; thriving, flourishing."
U-seong f Korean (Rare)
From Sino-Korean 雨 (u) meaning "rain" and 成 (seong) meaning "to succeed, to finish, to complete". Other hanja can be used.
Usher m Jewish (Americanized)
Jewish American variant of Asher.
Usher m English (American)
From the English surname Usher.
U-sik m Korean
From Sino-Korean 宇 "house; building, structure; eaves" and 植 "plant, trees, plants; grow".
Usul m Popular Culture
Alternate name of Paul Atreides, of the 'Dune' books.
Uta f Japanese
Means "song" in Japanese.