Meaning & History
Yura is a Slavic diminutive of Yuriy, the Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusian form of George. Primarily used in Russia and Ukraine, Yura functions as a shortened, affectionate variant of the full given name Yuriy. Yuriy itself traces back to the Greek Georgios, which derives from georgos meaning “farmer” or “earthworker”—a combination of the elements ge (“earth”) and ergon (“work”).
Related Names
Other Languages & Cultures
(Albanian)
Gjergj (Greek)
Georgios (Ancient Greek)
Georgius (Armenian)
Gevorg, Kevork (Basque)
Gorka (Belarusian)
Yuri 1, Yuriy, Yury (Bulgarian)
Georgi (Dutch)
Jordi (Cornish)
Jory (Serbian)
Đuro (Slovak)
Juraj (Slovene)
Jure, Jurica (Croatian)
Juro 1 (Czech)
Jiří (Swedish)
Georg (Norwegian)
Jørgen (Dutch)
Joeri (French)
Jordy 1 (Frisian)
Joris (Dutch)
Jurgen, Jurriaan, Sjors (French)
Youri (Romanian)
George (English)
Geordie, Georgie (Esperanto)
Georgo (Estonian)
Jüri (Finnish)
Yrjö (French)
Georges (Galician)
Xurxo (Georgian)
Giorgi (Portuguese)
Iuri (Romanian)
Gigi (Georgian)
Gio, Goga, Gogi (Low German)
Jürgen (German)
Jörg (German (Swiss))
Jürg (Greek)
Giorgos, Yiorgos, Yorgos (Hungarian)
György, Gyuri (Irish)
Seoirse (Italian)
Giorgio, Giorgino (Latvian)
Georgijs, Georgs, Jurģis, Jurijs, Juris, Jegors (Lithuanian)
Jurgis (Macedonian)
Gjorgji, Gorgi (Malayalam)
Geevarghese, Varghese (Maltese)
Ġorġ (Medieval Low German)
Jurian (Medieval Scandinavian)
Yrian (Norwegian)
Gøran, Ørjan (Polish)
Jerzy, Jurek (Spanish)
Jorge (Portuguese)
Jorginho (Romanian)
Gheorghe, Gheorghiță, Ghiță (Scottish Gaelic)
Deòrsa, Seòras (Serbian)
Djordje, Djuro, Đorđe, Djuradj, Đurađ (Sorbian)
Jurij (Swedish)
Göran, Jörgen, Örjan (Walloon)
Djôr (Welsh)
Siôr, Siors, Siorus
Sources: Wiktionary — Yura