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30,235Ailbe is the Old Irish form of Ailbhe, a name with uncertain etymology. It may derive from the Celtic root *albiyo- meaning "world", "light", or "white", or from Old Irish ail "rock". In Irish legend, Ailbhe (feminine) w...
Ailbhe is an Irish name steeped in legend and history. Derived from the Old Irish Ailbe, its etymology is debated: it may come from the Celtic root *albiyo- meaning "world, light, white" or from Old Irish ail meaning "ro...
Áile is a Sami female given name of debated origin, possibly representing the Sami form of Helga or an independent variant of Alice. The name is predominantly used among the Sami people, who inhabit the northern regions...
Ailean is a Scottish Gaelic masculine given name, equivalent to the English Alan or Allan. It belongs to a name tradition that largely entered Great Britain after the 11th-century Norman Conquest, brought by Breton settl...
Aileas is a Scottish Gaelic form of Alice. Like its counterparts across Europe, Aileas traces its lineage through a long chain of linguistic evolution. The name Alice itself derives from the Old French Aalis, a short for...
Aileen is an Irish feminine given name, primarily used in English, Irish, and Scottish contexts. It is a variant of Eileen, which in turn is an Anglicized form of the Irish name Eibhlín. The lineage extends further back:...
Ailen is a feminine given name of Mapuche origin, primarily used in Chile and Argentina. It is a variant of the more common Ayelen, which itself derives from the Mapuche language. The name's multiple proposed meanings in...
Aili is a female given name used in Finnish, Estonian, and Sami cultures. It is the Finnish and Estonian form of Áile, which itself is a Sami form of Helga. Ultimately, the name traces back through Helge to the Old Norse...
Ailill is a male given name of Old Irish origin, prominent in Irish mythology and early medieval history. Its meaning is commonly interpreted as “elf” or “beauty,” though the exact nuance remains debated by scholars.Etym...
Ailín is an Irish masculine name that is possibly a Gaelic form of Alan 1 or Ælfwine. Its exact etymology is uncertain, but the name has historical roots in both Ireland and Scotland.Historical BearersThe name Ailín appe...
Ailin is the Kazakh form of Aylin, a feminine given name derived from the Turkic word ay meaning "moon." In Kazakh orthography, the name is typically spelled Æîëèí (Ailin), and it represents a more precise transcription...
Ailís is the Irish form of Alice, a name with a long and noble history. Alice itself derives from the Old French name Aalis, a short form of Adelais, which ultimately comes from the Germanic name Adalheidis—meaning 'nobl...
Ailis is a Scottish Gaelic female given name, equivalent to the English name Alice. It is a traditional Gaelic name with a soft, melodic pronunciation (IPA: /ˈalɪʃ/). The name is closely related to and often considered a...
Ailish is an Irish feminine given name, functioning as an Anglicized form of Ailís which itself is the Irish equivalent of Alice. The name Ailish first emerged as a phonetic rendering of the Irish names Ailís or Eilís, w...
Ailpean is the Scottish Gaelic form of Alpin. The name Alpin itself is an Anglicized version of Ailpean, which may have originated from a Pictish word meaning "white." This etymology connects the name to lightness or bri...
Ailsa is a feminine given name of Scottish origin, derived from Ailsa Craig, a rocky island off the west coast of Scotland in the Firth of Clyde. The island's name itself is of uncertain derivation, though it is thought...
EtymologyAílton is a Portuguese given name of unclear etymology. Like the similar name Aírton, it may ultimately derive from the English surname Ayrton or the placename Airton, which refers to a settlement on the River A...
Aiman is a Kazakh feminine name possibly meaning "my moon" in Kazakh, derived from ай (ai) meaning "moon" and the Persian possessive suffix -من (-man) meaning "my". This naming pattern reflects the influence of Persianat...
Aiman is an alternate transcription of the Arabic name Ayman (أيمن), commonly used in Arabic-speaking countries and as the standard Malay form in Malaysia and Indonesia. The root name Ayman derives from the Arabic root y...
Aimar is a masculine given name of Germanic origin, most common in the Basque Country. It is first recorded in medieval texts from the 13th to 14th centuries in the Kingdom of Navarre, where it appears as a Frankish form...
Aimé is a French masculine given name (and occasionally a surname), directly derived from the Old French Amé, the masculine counterpart of Amée—which gave rise to the English name Amy. Meaning "beloved," Aimé shares its...
Aimée, often written without the accent as Aimee, is a feminine given name of French origin meaning "beloved". It is the French form of Amy, which itself derives from the Old French name Amée and ultimately from the Lati...
Aimee is a feminine given name of French origin that has become popular in English-speaking countries. It is a variant of Amy, influenced by the French form Aimée, which means "beloved" (from the Old French Amée and Lati...
Aimeric is a Germanic male given name. It is probably a variant of Heimirich, which itself is an older form of Henry. The name ultimately derives from the Proto-Germanic elements haima "home" and rīkṗ "ruler", thu...
Aimery is the Old French form of Aimeric. It ultimately derives from the Germanic name Heimirich, meaning “home ruler,” from elements heim “home” and rih “ruler.” This name evolved into Henry in Old English and medieval...
Aimi is a Japanese feminine given name. It is typically written using the kanji characters 愛 (ai) meaning "love, affection" and 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful", together conveying the sense of "beautiful love". However, as...
Aimilia is an alternate transcription of the Greek Αιμιλία (see Emilia). It is a feminine name used primarily in Greece, derived from the Latin family name Aemilius, which in turn traces back to the Latin word aemulus me...
Aimilios is an alternate transcription of the Greek name Αιμίλιος, which itself is a Greek form of Emil via Emilios. This connects Aimilios to the ancient Roman family name Aemilius, derived from Latin aemulus meaning "r...
Aimo is a Finnish masculine given name that derives from the Finnish word aimo, meaning "generous amount." While linguistically separate from the name of the Christian saint, the name shares its form with Saint Aimo (als...
Ain is an Estonian masculine given name, possibly a short form of Hendrik. The name stems from the Germanic root Heimirich, composed of elements heim "home" and rih "ruler", meaning "home ruler". Through Dutch and Estoni...
Aina is a feminine given name used in Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish. It is a variant of Aino, a name from the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala. In Finnish, aina also means "always," which adds a poetic layer...
Aina 2 is a feminine first name of Catalan origin, specifically a Balearic form of Anna. Anna itself derives from the Hebrew Hannah, meaning 'favor' or 'grace.' In the Greek and Latin Old Testament, Anna was used to tran...
Aina is a Japanese feminine given name with multiple possible character combinations, most commonly interpreted as deriving from ai (愛) meaning “love, affection” and na (菜) meaning “vegetables, greens.” The name can be...
Aina is a Latvian feminine given name. It is the feminine form of Ainārs, a masculine name derived from the Latvian noun aina meaning "scene" or "sight". The name therefore evokes imagery and vision.In Latvian naming tra...
Aina is a feminine given name of Kazakh origin, meaning "mirror." The name is ultimately derived from Persian آینه (āyneh), also meaning "mirror." In Kazakh and other Turkic cultures, the mirror is a symbol of clarity, t...
Ainara is a Basque feminine given name, derived as a variant of Enara. The name Enara means "swallow (bird)" in Basque, evoking the swift, graceful bird known for its migration patterns and appearance in spring. This poe...
Ainārs is a Latvian masculine given name, derived from the Latvian word aina meaning "scene, sight". The name encapsulates the idea of a vista or visual experience, reflecting Latvia's rich natural landscapes and the cul...
Aindrea is the Scottish Gaelic form of Andrew. The name Andrew itself derives from the Greek Ἀνδρέας (Andreas), which comes from ἀνδρεῖος (andreios) meaning "manly" or "masculine," ultimately rooted in ἀνήρ (aner) meanin...
Aindréas is an Irish masculine given name, the Gaelic form of Andrew. The name derives from the Greek Andreas, meaning “manly” or “masculine,” and is ultimately rooted in the element aner (man). In the New Testament, And...
Aindriú is the Irish form of Andrew, which itself derives from the Greek Andreas, meaning “manly” or “masculine” from the root aner (genitive andros). This name entered the Irish language through the early Christian trad...
Áine (Irish pronunciation: [ˈaːnʲə]) is an Irish feminine name derived from the Irish word áine, meaning "radiance, brilliance." In Irish mythology, Áine is a goddess of summer, wealth, beauty, and sovereignty, often ass...
Aineias (Αἰνείας) is the Ancient Greek form of the Latinized name Aeneas. It derives from the Greek word αἴνη (aine), meaning "praise," suggesting a poetic and honorific origin. In Greek mythology, Aineias was a Trojan h...
Aingeal is the Irish cognate of Angela, ultimately tracing back to the Greek word ἄγγελος (angelos), meaning "messenger." This Greek term evolved into the Latin angelus, which gave rise to the medieval masculine name Ang...
Aingeru is the Basque form of the name Angel, derived from the medieval Latin masculine name Angelus, which itself comes from the Greek word ἄγγελος (angelos) meaning "messenger." The heavenly creatures known as angels a...
Ainhara is a feminine given name used primarily in Basque and Spanish-speaking regions. It is a variant of Enara, which means "swallow (bird)" in Basque.The name Enara derives from the Basque word enara (also enara in so...
Ainhoa is a Basque female given name that originates from the name of a town in the southwestern France, in the historic Basque region of Labourd (now Pyrénées-Atlantiques). The town of Ainhoa is renowned for its sanctua...
Aino is a feminine given name used in Finland, Estonia, and Japan. In Finnish, the name means "the only one". The name was devised by Elias Lönnrot, who compiled the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, from oral folk so...
Ainoa is a Spanish form of Ainhoa, a Basque name derived from the town of Ainhoa in the French Basque Country, site of a famous Marian sanctuary. The name ultimately traces back to the Hebrew Miryam, the root of Mary, me...
Ainslee is a feminine variant of the name Ainsley. Ainsley itself originated as a surname derived from English place names such as Annesley in Nottinghamshire or Ansley in Warwickshire. These place names trace back to Ol...
Ainsley is a unisex given name of English and Scottish origin, derived from a surname that itself came from a place name. The place names in question are either Annesley in Nottinghamshire or Ansley in Warwickshire. The...
EtymologyAinslie is a variant of the name Ainsley, which itself originated as an English surname derived from place names such as Annesley in Nottinghamshire or Ansley in Warwickshire. These place names come from Old Eng...
Aintza is a Basque female name meaning "glory" in the Basque language. It is etymologically identical to the word aintza ("glory"), reflecting a common pattern in Basque naming where abstract virtues or qualities are ado...
Aintzane is a Basque feminine given name that was coined in the late 19th or early 20th century by the Basque nationalist and linguist Sabino Arana. It is a variant of Aintza, which means "glory" in Basque. The name was...
Ainūr is a Kazakh feminine given name, representing the Kazakh form of Aynur. As a name common across various Turkic and Muslim cultures, Aynur is composed of ay, meaning "moon" in Turkic languages, and nūr, the Arabic w...
Ainura is a Kyrgyz female given name, formed as an alternate transcription of the Kyrgyz name Айнура (in the Cyrillic script). The base form traces back to the Turkic and Persian-influenced vocabulary, combining elements...
Aiolos (also known as Aeolus) is a Greek divine name meaning "quick-moving, nimble" (αἰόλος). This name is primarily recognized in Greek mythology as that of the god of the winds, a role famously assigned to the third Ae...
Aira is a Finnish feminine given name. It is a variant of Airi, which is derived from the Finnish word airut meaning 'messenger, herald'. The name may also have been influenced by place names beginning with the same soun...
Airat is a Tatar masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Tatar and Bashkir name Ayrat. The meaning of Ayrat is uncertain, with two primary theories proposed. One theory traces it to the Arabic word khayrā...
Airi is a Japanese female given name. It is typically written with two ai combines with 莉 (ri) meaning "white jasmine" or 梨 (ri) meaning "pear". Other kanji combinations are also possible, giving additional nuances to...
Airi is a Finnish female name derived from the Finnish word airut, meaning "messenger" or "herald". The name may also have been influenced by place names beginning with the same phonetic element. It is a relatively moder...