Names starting with N
1,157 Names found
From an alternate reading of Chinese 娜 (nuó) "elegant, graceful, delicate", originally used in transcriptions of foreign feminine names.
From a Ga word used as a feminine royal title.
Signifies "saved, safe" in Arabic, a derivative of نجا (najā) signifying "to save, to entrust, to confide in".
The biblical Hebrew form of Naamah.
Signifies "pleasant" in Hebrew. In the Old Testament, both a daughter of Lamech and a wife of Solomon bear this name. Some later Jewish texts...
Signifies "little flower" in Greenlandic, from naasoq "flower, plant" and the diminutive suffix -nnguaq.
From Akkadian Nabu-apla-usur meaning "Nabu protect my son", from the god's name Nabu combined with aplu "son, heir" and an imperative form of naṣāru "...
The Greek variant of Nebuchadnezzar.
Possibly from a Semitic root meaning "to announce". This was a Babylonian and Assyrian god of wisdom, letters, and writing.
The Akkadian form of Nabopolassar.
The Latin form of Nebuchadnezzar.
The Akkadian form of Nebuchadnezzar.
Signifies "comforter" in Hebrew, from נָחַם (naḥam) "to comfort, to console". A notable 4th-century Babylonian rabbi bore this name.
Diminutive of Ignacio.
The Hebrew variant of Nahum.
Diminutive of Naděžda.
From Arabic نَدًى (nadan) meaning "dew, moisture, generosity", from ندي (nadiya) "to be moist, to be damp".
Signifies "hope" in South Slavic.
Signifies "generous" in Hebrew. In the Old Testament, this was a son of Aaron. He was consumed by flames when he offered unauthorized fire to God. It...
The Hebrew variant of Nadab.
The Portuguese variant of Nadia 1.
A Western European variation of Nadya 1, as well as an alternative transliteration of the Slavic name. It began to be used in France in the 19th...
An alternative transliteration of Arabic ناديّة (see Nadiyya), and the standard form in several other languages.
Diminutive of Nada 2.
Diminutive of Nadezhda.
A Russian and Bulgarian diminutive of Nadezhda.