Names Categorized "earth"
265 Names found
Jordanes is the name of a 6th-century Roman bureaucrat and historian of Gothic descent, known for his work Getica, a history of the Goths. His name is likely derived from that of the Jordan River, fitting the tradition o...
Jørg is a Norwegian short form of Jørgen, the Danish and Norwegian form of Jürgen, which ultimately derives from George. George itself originates from the Greek name Georgios (Γεώργιος), meaning 'farmer, earthworker'—fro...
Jørgen is a Danish, Norwegian, and Faroese masculine given name, cognate to the English name George. It is a form of the Low German name Jürgen, which itself is derived from George. The name ultimately comes from the Gre...
Jorja is a feminine given name that originated as a variant of Georgia, the Latinate feminine form of George. The name George ultimately derives from the Greek name Γεώργιος (Georgios), meaning "farmer" or "earthworker,"...
Jostein is a Norwegian masculine given name derived from the Old Norse name Jósteinn. It combines the elements jór meaning "horse" and steinn meaning "stone", which together symbolize strength and resilience. Etymology T...
Jürgen is a popular masculine given name in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Estonia, functioning as the Low German form of George. Low German dialects influenced the adaptation of the name, resulting in the distin...
Jurgita is a Lithuanian feminine given name, derived from the masculine form Jurgis, which itself is the Lithuanian version of George.EtymologyThe name ultimately traces back to the Greek name Γεώργιος (Georgios), from t...
Kaja is a feminine given name used in Polish and Slovene, functioning as a variant of Gaja 1. Gaja itself is either a form of Gaia or a feminine form of Gaius. Gaia traces its origins to the Greek word gaia, a parallel f...
Kalju is an Estonian male given name meaning "rock, boulder" in the Estonian language. The name directly derives from the Estonian word kalju, which translates to "cliff" or "crag," evoking strength, stability, and endur...
Kamen is a Bulgarian masculine given name meaning literally "stone", directly taken from the Bulgarian common noun for stone. It serves as a native Slavic calque of the Greek name Πέτρος (Petros, "rock"), which is the ba...
Kaya is a Turkish given name meaning "rock, cliff" in Turkish. As a masculine name, it evokes qualities of strength, stability, and resilience, much like a solid rock. It is also a common Turkish surname. The name can al...
Keighley is a feminine given name of English origin, derived from a surname that itself comes from a place name in West Yorkshire, England. The place name Keighley (pronounced KEETH-lee) is first recorded in the Domesday...
Keir is a masculine given name of Scottish origin, derived from the surname Kerr. The surname Kerr itself comes from a Scots word meaning "thicket" or "marsh," which has roots in the Old Norse kjarr, reflecting the Scand...
Kellen is a male given name that emerged in the United States in the early 1980s, its rise in popularity closely tied to American football player Kellen Winslow (1957–), whose professional career began around that time....
Kenya is a feminine given name taken directly from the East African country of Kenya. The country itself was named after Mount Kenya, which in the Kikuyu language is called Kĩrĩnyaga, meaning "the one having stripes" — a...
Keone is a Hawaiian given name meaning "the homeland" or "the sand," derived from the Hawaiian ke (the definite article) and one (sand, homeland). The name reflects the deep connection Hawaiian culture has with the land...
Kerr is a masculine given name of Scottish origin, derived from the Scots surname Kerr. The surname itself is a topographic name for someone who lived by a marsh or swampy woodland, originating from Middle English kerr (...
Ki is the Sumerian word for "earth", and the name of the primordial Sumerian goddess of the earth itself. As one of the oldest attested deities in the Mesopotamian pantheon, Ki was revered as the embodiment of the fertil...
Kiran is a given name widely used across the Indian subcontinent, including in Nepali, Indian languages such as Hindi, Gujarati, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, and also in Urdu (often spelled as a variant of...
Kolbrún is an Old Norse byname that evolved into a distinct Icelandic feminine given name. Meaning "black brow", it is composed of the elements kol ("coal") and brún ("eyebrow"). The name likely originated as a descripti...
Kolr is an Old Norse byname derived from the word kol, meaning "coal." In Norse naming traditions, bynames like Kolr often described a person's physical appearance—in this case, perhaps someone with dark hair or a swarth...
Kshitij is a modern Indian masculine given name, popular particularly in the Hindi- and Marathi-speaking regions. It derives from the Sanskrit word kṣitija (क्षितिज), a compound of kṣiti meaning "earth" and -ja meaning "...
Kumsal is a Turkish feminine given name that directly translates to "beach" in English. It is a toponymic name, derived from the natural landscape, evoking imagery of sandy shores and coastal beauty. While not among the...
Kun is a Chinese feminine name derived from the character 坤 (kūn), meaning "earth" or "female". In Chinese philosophy and cosmology, 坤 represents the yin principle—the receptive, nurturing, and earthly force, complemen...
Kybele is the ancient Greek transliteration of Cybele, an Anatolian mother goddess whose cult spread to Greece and Rome. While Cybele is the more common Latinized form, Kybele reflects the original Kŷbélē in Greek, reta...
Kyveli is the modern Greek form of Cybele, an ancient Phrygian mother goddess associated with fertility, nature, and wild animals. The name derives from the mythological figure Kybele, whose worship spread from Anatolia...
Lachlan is a masculine given name of Scottish Gaelic origin. It is an Anglicized form of Lachlann, which itself derives from the Old Irish personal name Lochlainn. The root name means "Viking, Scandinavian," coming from...
Lachlann is a Scottish Gaelic masculine given name, the original Gaelic form from which the Anglicized Lachlan is derived. It is ultimately a form of the Old Irish name Lochlainn, meaning "Viking, Scandinavian," itself d...
EtymologyLambert is a masculine given name derived from the Old German elements lant “land” and beraht “bright”. The name thus originally meant “bright land” or “famous land”. It is the English and French form of the Pro...
Lammert is a Dutch given name and surname, ultimately a variant of Lambert. The name Lambert is derived from the Old German elements lant "land" and beraht "bright". Thus, Lammert shares the meaning "bright land" or "fam...
Lan is a feminine name of Chinese and Vietnamese origin, commonly meaning "orchid" or "elegant" when written with the character 兰 (lán). In Chinese, it can also be derived from 岚 (lán), meaning "mountain mist." As a Si...
Lance is an English masculine given name with a rich etymological history. It ultimately derives from the Germanic name Lanzo, which originated as a short form of names beginning with the Old Frankish or Old Saxon elemen...
Landebert is an Old German form of the name Lambert, which itself derives from the Germanic elements lant "land" and beraht "bright". Thus, Landebert carries the meaning "bright land" or "famous land." Etymology and Ling...
Landon is a given name of English origin, derived from a surname that originally referred to a place name meaning "long hill" (effectively "ridge"). As a surname, it is a variant of Langdon, which itself comes from Old E...
Landric is an ancient Germanic masculine given name composed of the elements lant "land" and rih "ruler, king", thus meaning "ruler of the land" or "land ruler". This compound structure was typical of early medieval Germ...
Landulf is a masculine given name of Germanic origin, specifically from the Langobardic (Lombard) tradition. It is composed of the elements lant meaning "land" and wolf meaning "wolf." The name thus carries connotations...
Langston is a masculine given name of English origin, derived from an English surname that itself came from a place name. The place name is composed of the Old English elements lang "long" and stan "stone", suggesting a...
Lauchlan is a Scottish given name and surname, serving as a variant of Lachlan. The name ultimately traces back to the Old Irish Lochlainn, which means "Viking, Scandinavian" and originally referred to Scandinavia as "la...
Leize is a Basque feminine name that means "cave" in the Basque language. It derives from the Basque noun leze, signifying a natural cave or hollow. As a given name, Leize is rare but reflects the strong connection to na...
Leland is a masculine given name of English origin, derived from a surname that itself originated from an Old English place name meaning "fallow land" leah or woodland clearing lying untilled. The name's etymology traces...
Leofstan is an Old English masculine given name, formed from the elements leof meaning "dear" or "beloved" and stan meaning "stone." The name thus carries the sense of "beloved stone." It belongs to the tradition of comp...
Lias is a Swedish short form of Elias, which itself is a form of Elijah. While in Swedish it functions primarily as a diminutive or affectionate nickname, the name Lias also exists in other contexts: in English and Frenc...
Licarayen is a feminine name of Mapuche origin found in Chile and Argentina. The name means "stone flower," derived from the Mapuche elements likan, referring to a type of black stone, and rayen, meaning "flower."Etymolo...
Lochlainn is an Irish and Old Irish masculine given name meaning "Viking, Scandinavian" from Old Irish Lochlann, a name for Scandinavia. The name derives from loch meaning "lake" and literally translates to "land of the...
Lochlan is an Anglicized form of the Old Irish name Lochlainn, which itself derives from the archaic phrase Lochlann, a term used in early Irish sources for Scandinavia, particularly Norway. The name's literal meaning is...
Lochlann is a variant of Lochlainn, an Irish name derived from Old Irish Lochlann, a term for Scandinavia. The Old Irish name literally means "land of the lakes", from loch "lake", and likely originated as a geographical...
Lorelei is a feminine given name drawn from German legend and landscape, best known as the name of a mythical siren who lures sailors to their doom on the Rhine River. The name originates from the Lorelei rock, a 132-met...
Lur is a Basque feminine name meaning "earth" or "ground", derived from the Basque word lur. It reflects a deep connection to nature and the land, which is a common theme in Basque onomastics. The name is simple, crisp,...
Målfrid is a Norwegian female given name derived from the Old Norse name Málmfríðr. The first element is uncertain, possibly from malmr meaning "ore," while the second element fríðr means "beautiful" or "beloved." Thus,...
Malinalli is a Nahuatl feminine name that derives from the word for "tall grass" in the Nahuatl language. The name is deeply intertwined with Mexican history due to its association with La Malinche, the indigenous interp...
Mandawuy is a male Australian Aboriginal name of Yolngu origin, meaning "from clay" in the Yolngu language. The Yolngu people are the indigenous inhabitants of Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory of Australia. The name...
Maquinna (also transliterated as Muquinna, Macuina, or Maquilla) is a masculine name derived from the Nuu-chah-nulth language of the Pacific Northwest Coast. It originates from the term Mukwina (modern Nuu-chah-nulth: m̓...
Mason is a masculine given name (though recently it has been used for either sex), derived from an English occupational surname meaning "stoneworker." The surname itself comes from the Old French word maçon, which traces...
Meleager is the Latinized form of the Greek name Μελέαγρος (Meleagros), a heroic figure from Greek mythology. The name's etymology is uncertain, but it may derive from μέλεος (meleos) meaning "unhappy, useless" or μέλας...
Mica is a short form of Michaela, the feminine form of Michael.EtymologyThe name Michael derives from the Hebrew מִיכָאֵל (Miḵaʾel), meaning "who is like God?", a rhetorical question implying no person is like God. Micha...
Miltiades is a name of Ancient Greek origin, derived from Greek μίλτος (miltos) meaning 'red earth' and the patronymic suffix ἴδης (ides). Thus, the name essentially means 'son of miltos' or 'son of the red earth.' Etymo...
Monserrate is a Spanish variant of the name Montserrat. While typically feminine, it is sometimes used as a masculine given name in Hispanic cultures. The name ultimately derives from the Catalan Montserrat, the name of...
Monta is a modern Latvian feminine given name, derived possibly from the Latin word mons, meaning "mountain". The name is notable for its simplicity and connection to nature, though its usage is limited primarily to Latv...
Montgomery is a masculine given name transferred from an English surname with Norman French origins. The name originally derives from the place name Saint-Germain-de-Montgommery and Sainte-Foy-de-Montgommery in Normandy,...
Montse is the Catalan diminutive of Montserrat, a female given name that derives from a famous mountain near Barcelona. The mountain's name comes from Latin mons serratus, meaning "jagged mountain," and is home to a medi...