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15,656Sumeet is an alternate transcription of the masculine given name Sumit. It originates from the Sanskrit element sumita, meaning "well measured," and is used across several Indian languages, including Hindi, Marathi, Beng...
Sumit (also spelled Sumeet) is a masculine given name primarily found in India, used across Bengali, Punjabi, Hindi, and Marathi language communities. The name derives from the Sanskrit element sumita (सुमित), which mean...
Summanus is a Roman given name derived from the Latin god Summānus, the deity of nocturnal thunder and lightning. The name itself likely comes from sub mane "before the morning", referring to the god's domain over the ni...
Sumon is a Bengali masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Bengali সুমন, which is ultimately a form of Suman. The Sanskrit origin of this name combines the prefix su (su), meaning "good," with manas (mana...
Sundar is a modern form of the Sanskrit name Sundara, which means "beautiful." It is used as a given name primarily in Hindi and Tamil-speaking regions of India. The name derives from the Sanskrit adjective sundara, mean...
Sundara is a masculine given name of Sanskrit origin, derived from the word sundara (सुन्दर), meaning "beautiful." In Hindu tradition, this name appears for several minor characters in sacred texts and is also used as an...
Sunder is a masculine given name used primarily in Hindi and Tamil contexts, functioning as an alternate transcription of Sundar. Both names ultimately derive from the same linguistic root, reflecting a shared cultural h...
Sundri is an Old Norse masculine name, best known as the historical form of the modern Sondre. The name appears in Old Norse literature and etymology, and is first recorded as Suntrí in runic inscriptions. Its ultimate r...
Sune is a masculine given name used primarily in Denmark and Sweden, derived from the modern form of Suni. The root name Suni comes from Old Norse sunr, meaning "son". This etymology ties the name directly to the ancient...
Sung-ho is a Korean given name, representing an alternate transcription of Seong-ho. The late Romanization system that produced "Sung-ho" was common in South Korea from the 1950s through the 1970s, and this spelling was...
Sung-hoon is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Seong-hun, written in Korean Hangul as 성훈. It is a masculine name commonly used in South Korea.EtymologyThe name combines two Sino-Korean syllables: seon...
Sung-jin is a Korean given name. It is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul 성진, which is also commonly romanized as Seong-jin. The name can be written with various combinations of hanja (Sino-Korean characte...
Sung-min (also spelled Seong-min) is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Seong-min, written in Hangul as 성민. It is predominantly masculine. Etymology and Meaning The name combines Sino-Korean elements....
Sung-soo is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul 성수 (Seong-su). It is a masculine given name in Korea, derived from a combination of Sino-Korean characters. The first element is usually seong (成), meaning "...
Suni is an Old Norse name directly derived from the word sunr, meaning "son." It belongs to a tradition of simple, descriptive names common in early Germanic and Norse cultures, where patronymics (names indicating patern...
Sunil is a male given name common in South Asia, particularly in India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. Derived from the Sanskrit elements su meaning "good" or "very" and nīla meaning "dark blue," the name Sunil evokes the sense o...
Suparman is an Indonesian and Javanese masculine given name composed of the Sanskrit prefix सु (su) meaning "good," combined with Javanese parman meaning "mercy." The name thus conveys the sense of "good mercy" or "compa...
Suraj is a masculine given name widely used across northern India and Nepal, meaning "sun" in several northern Indian languages, including Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, and Marathi. The name derives from the Sanskrit element...
Suren (also spelled Sūrēn or Surena) is a name of ancient Iranian origin, derived from Avestan 𐬯𐬏𐬭𐬀 (sūra) meaning "strong, powerful". The name is historically associated with the House of Suren, a prominent Parthian nob...
Surendra is a masculine given name of Sanskrit origin, primarily used in Nepal, India (among Hindi, Marathi, and Telugu speakers), and by followers of Hinduism. The name is a testament to the deep-rooted onomastic tradit...
Suresh is a modern form of Suresha, a masculine given name widely used across India, particularly in Nepali, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, and Telugu-speaking communities. The name derives from the Sanskrit...
Etymology and MeaningSuresha is a masculine Indian name of Sanskrit origin. It means "ruler of the gods", derived from the elements sura (सुर) meaning "god" and īśa (ईश) meaning "ruler, lord". The name is used as an epit...
Suriya is the Thai form of Surya, as well as an alternate Tamil transcription. Its root, Surya, is derived from Sanskrit and means "sun". In Hindu mythology, Surya is the Vedic sun god who rides a chariot across the sky,...
Surya ( Sanskrit: सूर्य ) is a masculine name widely used across South Asia, meaning "sun" in Sanskrit. In Hinduism, Surya is the name of the Vedic solar deity, often depicted riding a chariot across the sky pulled by se...
Susanoo is a major kami in Japanese mythology, known as the god of storms and the sea. His name, of Japanese origin, possibly means "wild male, impetuous male," reflecting his tumultuous and contradictory nature. He is t...
Sushil is a modern masculine given name of Sanskrit origin, derived from the feminine name Sushila. Sushila itself means "good-tempered, well-disposed," from the Sanskrit prefix सु (su) meaning "good" and शील (śīla) mean...
Susila is an Indonesian masculine given name, representing a local form of the Sanskrit-derived Sushila. In its original context, Sushila can be either feminine or masculine: the feminine form (Suśīlā) refers to a consor...
Susilo is a Javanese masculine given name, derived from the Sanskrit Sushila via Indonesian adaptation. The root name Sushila (Sanskrit: सुशील or सुशीला) means "good-tempered, well-disposed," combining the prefix su- ("g...
Susumu is a masculine Japanese given name. It is primarily written with the kanji 進 (with the reading susumu), meaning "advance" or "make progress." However, like many Japanese names, Susumu can also be formed from othe...
Sutekh is the reconstructed Egyptian form of the name Seth 2, derived from the Egyptian swtẖ or stẖ, whose meaning is unknown. This name is primarily associated with the Egyptian god of chaos, the desert, storms, and des...
EtymologySutrisno is an IndoJavanese first name and surname, derived from the su- and tṛṣṇā. The name can also be spelled as described as Try Sutrisno, the national level results used among nationwide communication.
Su'ud is an Arabic name meaning "fortune, good luck," and is a plural form of Sa'd. It is traditionally transcribed as Saud. The name is deeply intertwined with the history of the Arabian Peninsula, as it was the name of...
Šuwaliyat is a Hittite theonym of uncertain meaning, attested as the name of a vegetation god in the Hittite pantheon. The name is considered to be etymologically Hittite, formed with the suffix -att used to create nouns...
EtymologySvante is a Swedish short form of Svantepolk, which in turn derives from the Old Swedish form of the Slavic name Svatopluk. The root name is ultimately composed of the Old Slavic elements svętŭ "sacred, holy" an...
Svantepolk is an Old Swedish form of the Slavic name Svatopluk, itself composed of the elements svętŭ "sacred, holy" and pŭlkŭ "people, host, army". The name thus carries the meaning of "sacred people" or "holy army".Ety...
Svantovit is a variant of the Slavic god Svetovid, ultimately derived from the name Svetovit.EtymologyThe name Svetovit combines the Slavic elements svętŭ "sacred, holy" and vitŭ "master, lord", thus meaning "holy lord"...
Svarog is a theonym from Slavic mythology, a god primarily known from the Primary Chronicle, a medieval East Slavic historical text. The name's probable meaning is "fire", derived from the Old Slavic element sŭvarŭ meani...
Svatomír is a Czech masculine given name, derived from the Old Slavic name Svetomir. Its meaning is rooted in the Slavic elements svętŭ meaning "sacred, holy" and mirŭ meaning "peace, world," so the name as a whole can b...
Svätopluk is a Slovak given name, the Slovak form of Svatopluk. It is a Slavic compound name derived from the elements svętŭ meaning "sacred, holy" and pŭlkŭ meaning "people, host, army"; thus it translates as "sacred pe...
Svatopluk is a Czech masculine given name with deep roots in Slavic linguistic and cultural history. It is composed of the Old Slavic elements svętŭ "sacred, holy" and pŭlkŭ "people, host, army", thus carrying the meanin...
Svatoslav is a Czech masculine given name. It is the Czech form of Svyatoslav, which is derived from the Slavic elements svętŭ ("sacred, holy") and slava ("glory"). The name thus carries the meaning of "holy glory" or "s...
Svein is a Norwegian masculine given name, the local variant of Sven. Like Sven, it originates from the Old Norse byname Sveinn, meaning "boy" or "young man." This name was historically used as a term for a servant or a...
Sveinn is the Old Norse and Icelandic form of Sven, a name rooted in a byname drawn from the Old Norse word sveinn, meaning "boy" or "young man". This simple but evocative origin—designating a youth or servant—contrasts...
Sveinung is a Norwegian masculine given name derived from the Old Norse Sveinungr, a name or byname that means "young Svein" or "descendant of Svein." It is formed by combining the name Svein (itself a Norwegian variant...
Sveinungr is an Old Norse name, the original form of the modern Scandinavian given name Sveinung. It is a byname derived from the Old Norse name Svein, which itself comes from the Old Norse word sveinn meaning "boy" or "...
Etymology and HistorySven is a Scandinavian given name derived from the Old Norse byname sveinn, meaning "boy" or "young man". The original Old Norse spelling was sveinn, and the name historically was not only a personal...
Svend is a Danish form of Sven, which itself derives from the Old Norse byname Sveinn meaning "boy" or "young man". This etymology reflects the common medieval Scandinavian practice of using simple descriptive terms as p...
Sverre is a Norwegian masculine given name derived from the Old Norse name Sverrir, which means "wild, swinging, spinning." The name reflects a dynamic, energetic quality, possibly originally a nickname referring to a re...
Sverrir is an Old Norse name (from Sverrir) that serves as both the direct ancestor of the modern Scandinavian name Sverre and the contemporary Icelandic form. The root meaning — "wild, swinging, spinning" — evokes a ric...
Svetislav (Serbian: Светислав) is a Serbian masculine given name of Slavic origin. It is the Serbian form of Svyatoslav, which itself is derived from the Slavic elements svętŭ 'sacred, holy' and slava 'glory'. Thus, Svet...
Svetomir is a Bulgarian and Serbian masculine given name, derived from the Slavic elements svętŭ meaning "sacred, holy" and mirŭ meaning "peace, world". The name is a typical compound of Old Slavic origin, combining two...
Svętomirŭ (ⰔⰂⰡⰕⰑⰏⰨⰓⰟ) is the reconstructed Proto-Slavic form of the Old Slavic name Svetomir. The name itself is a compound of two distinct Slavic elements: svętŭ, meaning "sacred, holy," and mirŭ, meaning "peace, world....
Svętopŭlkŭ is the reconstructed Proto-Slavic form of the name Svatopluk, derived from the Slavic elements svętŭ “sacred, holy” and pŭlkŭ “people, host, army”. As a linguistic reconstruction, Svętopŭlkŭ represents the hyp...
Svetoslav is the Bulgarian form of Svyatoslav, a Slavic given name.EtymologyThe name derives from the Slavic elements svętŭ meaning "sacred, holy" and slava meaning "glory". Thus, Svetoslav can be interpreted as "holy gl...
Svętoslavŭ is the Proto-Slavic reconstructed form of the name Svyatoslav, derived from the Slavic elements svętŭ 'sacred, holy' and slava 'glory'. This compound name emerged in the early medieval period as Slavic peoples...
Svetovid is a variant of Svetovit, the name of a major deity in Slavic mythology. Both forms derive from the Slavic elements svętŭ ("sacred, holy") and vitŭ ("master, lord"), giving meanings like "Strong Lord" or "Holy L...
Svetovit is a masculine name of Slavic origin, derived from the elements svętŭ "sacred, holy" and vitŭ "master, lord". Thus, the name means "holy lord" or "strong lord". It is best known as the name of a prominent West S...
Svetozar (Cyrillic: Светозар) is a masculine given name of Slavic origin, predominantly used in Croatian and Serbian contexts. The name is a compound derived from the Serbo-Croatian element svet meaning "holy" or "light,...
Sviatoslav is a Russian and Ukrainian given name of Slavic origin, functioning as an alternate transcription of Svyatoslav. The name combines elements meaning "holy" or "light" (svętŭ) and "glory" (slava), resulting in i...
Svit is a Slovene masculine given name meaning "dawn," derived from the Slovene noun for the period of early morning light. The name is semantically parallel to other European names for the dawn, such as the Romanian Zor...