Names Categorized "gold"
97 Names found
EtymologyFlávio is the Portuguese form of the Latin name Flavius, which derives from the Latin word flavus meaning "yellow" or "golden." The name likely originally referred to someone with blonde hair or a golden complex...
Flavio is the Italian and Spanish form of the ancient Roman family name Flavius, which derives from the Latin word flavus meaning "yellow" or "golden". Originally a Roman family name (nomen), Flavius gained prominence as...
Flaviu is a Romanian masculine given name, borrowed from Latin Flavius. It was historically used as a name among the upper classes and was later revived in modern Romania as a distinguished classical name.Etymology and H...
Flavius is a Roman family name derived from Latin flavus, meaning "yellow" or "golden," originally likely referring to yellow hair. As a nomen gentilicium, Flavius belonged to the gens Flavia, a plebeian family first rec...
Golda is a feminine given name derived from the Yiddish word גאָלד (gold), meaning "gold." The name is historically associated with Jewish communities in Eastern Europe, where Yiddish was the common language. The earlies...
Goldie is a Yiddish feminine variant of the name Golda. Rooted in the Yiddish word gold, meaning "gold," the name carries connotations of preciousness and value. While Golda is more widely recognized in Ashkenazi Jewish...
Goldie is an English feminine given name derived from a nickname for a person with blond hair, from the English word gold. The name evokes the precious metal's brightness and value, often symbolizing rarity, warmth, or p...
Hema is a feminine given name of Sanskrit origin. Derived from the Sanskrit word hemā (हेमा), meaning "golden", the name reflects qualities of beauty, value, and preciousness. It is widely used across the Indian subconti...
Hoàng is a Vietnamese surname and occasional given name derived from Sino-Vietnamese 黃 (hoàng), meaning "yellow". It is equivalent to the Chinese surname Huang, and in Vietnamese it also appears as Huỳnh, which is a com...
Jin 1 is a unisex Chinese given name written with various characters that carry distinct meanings. The most common character is 金 (jīn) meaning "gold, metal, money." Other possibilities include 锦 (jǐn) meaning "tapestr...
Kanchan is a variant of the name Kanchana, derived from Sanskrit kañcana meaning "golden." This name is used across several Indian languages, including Bengali, Hindi, Marathi, and Odia.EtymologyThe root name Kanchana co...
Kanchana is a feminine given name derived from कञ्चन (kañcana), a Sanskrit word meaning "golden". The name carries connotations of preciousness, brightness, and value, reflecting the cultural esteem for gold in South and...
Kasun is a Sinhalese masculine given name meaning "gold" in the Sinhala language. The term kasun (කසුන්) derives from Sri Lanka's ancient literary and hereditary contexts, where gold has symbolized wealth, purity, and di...
Kham is a unisex given name that means "gold" in the Lao language, a Tai-Kadai language spoken primarily in Laos and northeastern Thailand. As a personal name, it reflects the cultural value placed on precious materials...
Khamphet is a Laotian given name that combines two elements reflecting precious materials. The first part, ຄຳ (kham), means "gold" in Lao, while the second, ເພັດ (phet), means "diamond" or "gem". Together, the name Khamp...
Khamsing is a Lao masculine given name composed of two elements: ຄຳ (kham) meaning "gold" and ສິງ (sing) meaning "lion." As a compound, the name thus signifies a "golden lion" – a powerful and precious image that reflect...
Kim is a Vietnamese feminine given name derived from Sino-Vietnamese 金 (kim), meaning "gold" or "metal." As a unisex name in some contexts but predominantly female in modern Vietnam, Kim reflects the Chinese character's...
Kou is a masculine given name of Hmong origin. The name means "gold" in the Hmong language, reflecting the cultural value placed on precious metals and their symbolism of prosperity, durability, and radiance. Among the H...
Kullervo is a tragic hero in Finnish mythology, whose story is famously recounted in the national epic Kalevala compiled by Elias Lönnrot. The name Kullervo is derived from the Finnish word kulta, meaning "gold," though...
Marigold is an English feminine given name derived from the common name of a group of flowering plants belonging to the genera Calendula and Tagetes. The flower name itself is a combination of Mary and the English word g...
Millaray is a feminine given name of Mapuche origin, meaning "golden flower" — from milla "gold" and rayen "flower". The name reflects the Mapuche people's deep connection to nature and their language, Mapudungun, which...
Nubia is a Spanish female given name derived from the name of the ancient region of Nubia in Africa, situated along the Nile River in what is now southern Egypt and northern Sudan. The name of the region itself likely co...
Okropir is the Georgian form of the Greek name Chrysostomos, meaning "golden mouth." The name translates this epithet directly into Georgian, where it is used as a given name.EtymologyThe Greek Chrysostomos derives from...
Orabela is an Esperanto feminine name meaning "golden-beautiful", derived from Latin elements: aurea meaning "gold" and bella meaning "beautiful". The name reflects the creative linguistic tradition of Esperanto, where w...
Oralie is a rare feminine given name of English origin, possibly a variant of Aurélie, the French feminine form of the Roman family name Aurelius. The root name Aurelius is derived from Latin aureus meaning "golden, gild...
Órfhlaith is a variant of Órlaith, an Irish feminine given name. The name derives from the Old Irish elements ór “gold” and flaith “ruler, sovereign, princess,” thus meaning “golden ruler” or “golden princess.” While nam...
Oria is the Italian form of Aurea, a Late Latin name derived from aureus, meaning "golden." The name carries connotations of brightness, value, and preciousness, much like the metal it references. As a feminine given nam...
Oriana is a feminine given name used in Italian and Spanish, with a rich and uncertain etymology.Etymology and MeaningThe name Oriana is possibly derived from Latin aurum meaning "gold," or from its descendants in Romanc...
Oriane is the French form of Oriana, a given name with rich historical and linguistic roots. The name Oriana itself is possibly derived from Latin aurum (gold) or from its Romance derivatives, Spanish oro or French or. A...
Orianne is a French feminine given name, most commonly recognized as a form of Oriana. The name Oriana itself has multiple possible origins; it may derive from Latin aurum meaning "gold," or from its Romance descendants,...
Orietta is an Italian feminine given name, functioning as a diminutive of Oria, which itself is the Italian form of Aurea. The ultimate root, the Late Latin name Aurea, derives from the Latin adjective aureus meaning "go...
Orinda is an English female name, most prominent as a pseudonym of the 17th-century English poet Katherine Philips (1631–1664). The name is believed to be an elaborate invention derived from Spanish oro meaning "gold," p...
EtymologyOriol is a Catalan given name and surname tracing its linguistic roots to the Latin word aureus ("golden"). Historically, Oriol first emerged as a surname, likely as a nickname for someone with golden hair or a...
Orla is the anglicized form of the Irish name Órlaith, derived from the Old Irish elements ór "gold" and flaith "ruler, sovereign, princess". The name thus signifies "golden ruler" or "golden princess." In medieval Irela...
Orlagh is an anglicized form of the Irish name Órlaith. It is a feminine given name of Irish origin, often interpreted as meaning "golden ruler" or "golden princess," derived from the Old Irish elements ór 'gold' and fla...
Órlaith is a feminine Irish given name derived from Old Irish elements ór ("gold") and flaith ("ruler, sovereign, princess"), meaning "golden ruler" or 'golden princess.' The name appears in medieval Irish records and is...
Orville is a masculine given name created for a character in the novel Evelina (1778) by the English writer Frances Burney (later Madame d'Arblay). Burney likely intended the name to mean "golden city" in French, though...