Browse Names
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30,235Kimberley is a unisex given name of English origin, derived from the Kimberly variant. The name is ultimately tied to the city of Kimberley in South Africa, which was named after Lord Kimberley (John Wodehouse, 1st Earl...
Kimberly is a feminine given name that originated as a variant spelling of Kimberley, itself derived from the city of Kimberley in South Africa. The city was named after Lord Kimberley (1826–1902), whose title referred t...
Kimberlyn is an elaboration of Kimberly using the popular name suffix lyn.The name is a modern extension of Kimberly, which itself comes from the South African city of Kimberley, named after Lord Kimberley (1826–1902). T...
Kimbra is a modern feminine given name that originated as a diminutive of Kimberly. The name has gained international recognition largely due to the New Zealand singer-songwriter Kimbra (born 1990), who is known mononymo...
Kimi is a Finnish masculine given name, typically understood as a diminutive or short form of Kim 2, which itself is a Scandinavian short form of Joachim. In modern usage, Kimi functions primarily as a standalone first n...
Kimiko is a feminine Japanese given name composed of various kanji combinations, most commonly including ki (meaning "valuable"), mi ("beautiful"), or kimi ("lord, noble") paired with the suffix ko ("child"). The element...
Kimimela is a feminine given name of Lakota (Sioux) origin, meaning "butterfly." The name derives from the Lakota word kimímela, which refers to the delicate insect. In Lakota culture, butterflies are often associated wi...
Kimmernaq is a Greenlandic female given name that means "cowberry" or "lingonberry" (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) in the Greenlandic language. The name is derived directly from the noun kimmernaq, which refers to the small, ta...
Kimmie is a diminutive of the feminine names Kimberly or Kim. It is an English given name, typically used as a short form (or hypocorism) of these longer names.The name Kimberly itself originates from the city of Kimberl...
Etymology and OriginKimmo is a Finnish given name for males, with an origin shrouded in uncertainty. Its etymology is not definitively known, though it is often grouped with other Finnish names ending in -mo, such as Jor...
Kimmy is a diminutive and nickname, primarily used in English-speaking countries, most often derived from the feminine given name Kimberly (or its variant Kimberley) or, less commonly, from Kim 1.Etymology and HistoryThe...
Kimo is a Hawaiian form of James, itself a derivation of the Hebrew name Jacob. In Hawaiian culture, names often undergo phonetic adaptation to fit the language's sound system, which lacks several consonants found in Eng...
Kinborough is a Medieval English form of Cyneburg, an Old English feminine name meaning "royal fortress". The name is composed of the elements cyne "royal" and burg "fortress". Etymology and Historical ContextThe origina...
Kincső is a Hungarian feminine given name created by the author Mór Jókai for his novel The Novel of the Next Century (1872). The name is derived from the Hungarian word kincs, meaning "treasure", with the suffix -ő ofte...
Kine is a Norwegian feminine given name, derived as a short form of Kristine. It carries the same ultimate meaning as Christina — "follower of Christ." Though compact, Kine has been in use in Norway since the early 20th...
Kineret is a Hebrew feminine given name that takes its name from a large freshwater lake in northern Israel, known in English as the Sea of Galilee. The lake's Hebrew name, Kineret, is generally thought to derive from th...
King is an English given name derived directly from the vocabulary word king, which originates from the Old English cyning, meaning "ruler" or "leader." The term traces back to the Proto-Germanic kuningaz, which also pro...
Kinga is a Hungarian and Polish feminine given name, originating as a diminutive of Kunigunde. The name Kunigunde itself is composed of Old German elements kunni ('clan, family') or kuni ('royal'), combined with gunda ('...
Kinge is a German feminine given name, functioning primarily as a diminutive of Kunigunde. While its modern use is rare, it fits within a Germanic naming tradition that created affectionate or familiar forms from longer...
Kingsley is an English given name originally derived from a surname that came from a place name meaning "king's wood" in Old English. The name is composed of the Old English elements cyning (king) and leah (woodland clea...
Kingston is a masculine given name of English origin, derived from an English surname that originally denoted a place name meaning "king's town" in Old English. The name has ancient roots, stemming from the Old English C...
Etymology and MeaningK'inich is a name of Mayan origin, meaning "hot, sunny" in Classic Maya ([1]). It derives from the Maya word k'in, meaning "sun." In the Maya pantheon, K'inich Ajaw (ajaw meaning "king, lord") was th...
Kinich is variant of the Classic Maya name K'inich, which means "hot, sunny" from the root k'in "sun". In Maya mythology, K'inich Ajaw was the sun god, literally "Sun Lord" (ajaw meaning "king, lord"). This theophoric el...
Kinley 1 is a feminine given name of English origin, derived from the Scottish surname Kinley — an Anglicized form of Mac Fhionnlaigh, which itself comes from the Gaelic personal name Fionnlagh. Etymology and Historical...
Kinley 2 is an alternate transcription of Tibetan ཀུན་ལེགས (Kunley). The name derives from elements kun meaning "all, every" and legs meaning "good, well, proper," giving the overall meaning of "all goodness." As a varia...
Kinneret is an alternate transcription of the Hebrew name כִּנֶּרֶת (see Kineret). It is most commonly associated with a large freshwater lake in northern Israel, known in English as the Sea of Galilee. In Jewish and Chr...
Kinsey is a feminine given name derived from the English surname Kinsey, which in turn comes from the Old English personal name Cynesige. The root element cyne means "royal" and sige means "victory," giving the name the...
Kinslee is a modern feminine given name that originated as a spelling variant of the surname-derived Kinsley. The name Kinsley itself is derived from an English place name, which refers to a clearing belonging to a perso...
Kinsley is a given name of English origin, derived from a surname that itself originated from an English place name. The place name is composed of the Old English personal name Cyne, a short form of names beginning with...
Kip is a given name originating as a nickname, most probably derived from the English word kipper, meaning "male salmon." The name has been used in English-speaking countries, primarily the United States and Australia, a...
Kipling is an English given name derived from a surname, which itself originated from a place name meaning "Cyppel's people". The surname was borne by the renowned British author Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936), whose litera...
Kir is a Russian male given name, derived as a form of Cyrus. The Russian adoption of this name follows the broader Christian tradition of using biblical and classical names, often adapted to local phonetic patterns.Orig...
Kíra is a Hungarian feminine form of Cyrus. The name Cyrus itself derives from the Old Persian 𐎤𐎢𐎽𐎢𐏁 (Kuruš), possibly meaning 'young' or 'humiliator (of the enemy)', and is also linked to the Elamite tradition. In Hunga...
Kira is a feminine given name used in Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian. It is the Russian feminine form of Cyrus, a name with a complex etymology dating back to ancient Persia.EtymologyThe name Cyrus is the Latin form...
Kira 2 is an English variant of the Irish name Ciara 1. Though sharing the spelling with the renowned Russian female name Kira (derived from Kyros), this particular English form originates from an Irish source. It follow...
Kirabo is a unisex name of Ganda origin, common in Uganda among the Baganda people. The name directly means "gift" in Luganda, the language of the Baganda, reflecting a parent's gratitude for their child's birth. It is u...
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...
Kiraz is a Turkish feminine given name that means "cherry". The word ultimately derives from the Ancient Greek city name Κολόη (Kolóē) via Ottoman Turkish. The cherry fruit has been cultivated in Anatolia for millennia,...
Kirby is a unisex given name derived from an English surname that originated as a locative surname. Ultimately, it comes from an Old Norse place name, combining kirkja meaning "church" and býr meaning "settlement", thus...
Kire is a Macedonian diminutive of Kiril, which is the Bulgarian and Macedonian form of Cyril. As a short and affectionate variant, Kire is used primarily within Macedonia, often as a given name or a familiar form among...
Kiri is a female given name with multiple cultural origins, notably in Māori where it means "skin of a tree or fruit" (specifically "skin," "bark," or "rind"). The name gained international recognition through New Zealan...
Kiril is a Bulgarian and Macedonian form of Cyril, which itself derives from the Greek name Kyrillos, meaning "lord" (from Greek kyrios). The name is widespread in Eastern Europe, particularly among Orthodox Christian co...
Kirill is the Russian form of Cyril, a male given name with deep ecclesiastical roots. Derived from the Greek Κύριλλος (Kyrillos), which in turn comes from κύριος (kyrios) meaning "lord"—a term frequently used in the Gre...
Kirils is the Latvian form of Cyril, a name with deep roots in Christian tradition. It entered Latvian usage as a borrowing from Russian Кирилл (Kirill), retaining its religious and cultural connotations. The name has be...
Kirilŭ is a Medieval Slavic form of Cyril, a name ultimately derived from the Greek Kyrillos, meaning "lord" (from kyrios). In the medieval Slavic context, this form reflects early adaptation of the name by Slavic-speaki...
Kiritapu is a Māori female name with a deeply spiritual meaning, composed of the elements kiri ("skin") and tapu ("sacred"). The name thus translates to "sacred skin" and poetically denotes a "virgin" or "unmarried" woma...
Kirk is an English masculine given name derived from the Old Norse word kirkja meaning "church", which itself comes from the Greek κυριακόν (kyriakon), meaning "belonging to the Lord." The name was popularized as a trans...
Etymology & MythologyKirke is the modern Greek form of Circe, a name rooted in ancient Greek mythology. The original Greek form Kirke (Κίρκη) is thought to derive from the Greek word kirkos (κίρκος), meaning "hawk." In G...
Kiro is a Macedonian diminutive of Kiril, the Bulgarian and Macedonian form of Cyril. As a short, affectionate form, Kiro is used primarily in North Macedonia and among Macedonian diaspora communities.EtymologyThe ultima...
Etymology and MeaningKirrily is a modern feminine given name used primarily in English-speaking countries, particularly Australia. It is possibly an elaboration of Kiri or Kira. The name Kiri is of Maori origin, from the...
Kirsi is a Finnish female given name with multiple layers of meaning, reflecting both linguistic adaptation and natural imagery. It originated either as a Finnish form of Christina or as a short form of Kirsikka, which m...
Kirsikka is a Finnish feminine given name that directly translates to "cherry" in the Finnish language. As a nature-inspired name, it belongs to a group of Finnish names derived from plants, fruits, and natural phenomena...
Kirsteen is a Scottish feminine given name, functioning as a local variant of Christina. The name ultimately derives from the Latin Christiana, the feminine form of Christian, meaning 'follower of Christ.' In Scotland, t...
Kirsten is a Scandinavian form of Christina, ultimately derived from the Latin Christiana, meaning "follower of Christ." It is predominantly used in Danish, Norwegian, and to a lesser extent, English-speaking countries.E...
Kirsti is a Finnish feminine given name, serving as the vernacular form of Christina. The name ultimately derives from Christiana, the Latin feminine form of Christian, meaning 'follower of Christ.' It belongs to a wides...
Kirstie is a Scottish feminine given name, primarily used as a diminutive of Kirsteen or Kirstin, both Scottish forms of Christina, which itself derives from the Latin Christiana, meaning "follower of Christ." Etymology...
Kirstin is a Scottish feminine given name, serving as the local form of Christina. This makes it a distant linguistic descendant of the Latin Christiana, meaning “a Christian.” The name is borne by a cluster of modern be...
Kirstine is a Danish given name, a variant of Kristine, which itself is a form of Christina. Ultimately, the name derives from the Latin Christiana, the feminine form of Christianus, meaning "follower of Christ." The nam...
Etymology Kirsty is a Scottish feminine given name, primarily functioning as a diminutive of Kirsteen or Kirstin. These in turn derive from Christina, the Latin feminine form of Christian. The root name, Christina, origi...
Kirtida is a feminine given name of Sanskrit origin, meaning "one who bestows fame" in Sanskrit. The name is composed of two elements: kīrti (fame, renown) and dā (to give), hence "giver of fame." It is primarily used in...