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15,656Saturnino is a masculine given name used in Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish. It is the local form of the Latin name Saturninus, a Roman cognomen derived from the name of the god Saturn (Latin: Saturnus). The ultimate ro...
Saturninus is a Roman cognomen derived from the name of the Roman god Saturnus (see Saturn). This name was historically used as a family name in ancient Rome and later adapted as a given name in Christian contexts. It be...
Saturnus is the Latin form of Saturn, a name of uncertain meaning. It is directly derived from Roman mythology, where Saturnus was the god of agriculture, harvest, and time, and was also the father of major deities like...
Saud is an alternate transcription of the Arabic name سعود (see Su'ud). It is derived from the Arabic root saʿida, meaning "to be happy, to be lucky," and carries the sense of "fortune" or "good luck." The name is most p...
Etymology and OriginsSaúl is a Spanish given name, representing the local form of Saul. The name ultimately derives from the Hebrew Sha'ul (שָׁאוּל), meaning "asked for" or "prayed for." This etymology reflects a common...
Saul is a masculine given name of Hebrew origin, derived from the Hebrew name Sha'ul (שָׁאוּל), meaning "asked for" or "prayed for." This name appears prominently in the Bible, where it is borne by two significant figure...
Sauli is a Finnish masculine given name, derived as a vernacular form of the biblical name Saul. The name Saul originates from the Hebrew Sha'ul, meaning "asked for" or "prayed for," reflecting the biblical account of Ki...
Saulius is a masculine given name with dual heritage in Lithuanian and Biblical traditions. In Lithuanian, it is a masculine form of the goddess name Saulė, meaning "sun," and also serves as the Lithuanian form of the Bi...
Saulos is the Greek form of the Hebrew name Saul, used in the Greek New Testament. The name originates from the Hebrew שָׁאוּל (Sha'ul), meaning "asked for" or "prayed for." In the Old Testament, Saul was the first king...
Sauron is a name of immense evil in J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium, deriving from the fictional Elvish language Quenya, where sauron is interpreted as "abhorred" or "the abhorred one." The name is associated with the Dar...
Sauveur is the French cognate of Salvador, ultimately deriving from the Late Latin name Salvator, meaning "saviour" and referring to Jesus. As a direct French translation of Salvator, Sauveur has been used primarily in F...
Sava is the Serbian, Bulgarian, and Ukrainian form of Sabas. The root name Sabas is derived from the Greek Σάββας (Sabbas), which ultimately comes from the Aramaic word סַבָא (sava) meaning "old man" or "grandfather." Th...
Savaş is a Turkish masculine given name that directly translates to "war," "battle," or "fighting." The name derives from the common Turkish noun savaş, which denotes armed conflict or combat. It belongs to a tradition o...
Saveli is a Russian masculine given name, functioning as an alternate transcription of Saveliy (also spelled Savely). The name Saveliy itself derives from the Late Roman name Sabellius, which means "a Sabine" – referring...
Saveliy is a Russian masculine given name, derived from the Latin name Sabellius, which in turn means "a Sabine." The Sabines were an ancient Italic people who lived in the central Apennine region of Italy, well known fo...
Savely is a Russian masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Russian Савелий (see Saveliy). The name ultimately derives from the Late Roman name Sabellius, which means "a Sabine" — referring to the Sabines...
Etymology & OriginSaverio is the Italian form of Xavier, ultimately deriving from the Basque place name Etxeberria, meaning "the new house". This origin connects Saverio to a rich linguistic heritage — the Basque word et...
Saveriu is the Corsican form of Xavier. Corsican, a Romance language closely related to Italian, adapts many foreign names into its own phonetic and orthographic system. Saveriu follows this pattern, using the Corsican s...
Savino is an Italian given name and surname, originating as a variant of Sabino. The name traces its roots to the Latin Sabinus, a Roman cognomen meaning "a Sabine." The Sabines were an ancient Italic people living in ce...
Savio is a given name of Italian origin, derived from the Italian adjective savio, meaning "wise." It reflects a long-standing tradition in many cultures of bestowing virtues as names, similar to names like Sophia ("wisd...
Savitr (Sanskrit: सवितृ, IAST: Savitṛ, nominative Savitā), meaning "rouser, stimulator" or "impeller, vivifier," is a Vedic Hindu sun god, sometimes identified with Surya, the solar deity proper. In the Rig Veda, the old...
Savva is the Russian form of the Greek name Sabas, which in turn derives from the Aramaic word sava meaning "old man, grandfather." The name carries connotations of wisdom and age, reflecting its ancient roots. In the Ea...
Savvas is the modern Greek transcription of Sabbas, a Late Greek name derived from the old Aramaic word for 'old man, grandfather'. The root name Sabas ultimately comes from the Aramaic sava, meaning 'old man' or 'grandf...
Sawney is a Scots diminutive of Alexander, historically used as a nickname for a Scotsman in English slang. The name derives from the Scottish Gaelic form Alasdair (anglicized Alistair), with Sawney coming from the last...
Sawyl is the Welsh form of Samuel, derived from the Hebrew שְׁמוּאֵל (Shemuʾel), commonly interpreted as "name of God" or "God has heard." The name bears notable historical and legendary associations in early medieval Wa...
Saxon is a masculine first name derived from the English surname Saxon, which originated as a tribal name for the Saxons, a Germanic people of early medieval "Old" Saxony in what is now northern Germany. The tribal name...
Sayed is an alternate transcription of the Arabic title sayyid (سيد), meaning “lord, master.” It is one of many transliterations of a term that denotes dignity and leadership in Arabic-speaking and Muslim-majority societ...
Etymology and MeaningSayf ad-Din (also commonly rendered Saif al-Din) is a classical Arabic theophoric name composed of two elements: sayf meaning "sword" and dīn meaning "religion, faith." As a compound, it is interpret...
Sayfullah is a masculine Arabic name that translates directly to "sword of Allah". This name combines sayf ("sword") with Allah, the Arabic term for God. It carries a powerful martial and spiritual significance, evoking...
Sayyid (also spelled Seyed, Syed; Arabic: سيد) is an honorific title meaning "lord, master" in Arabic. It is used as both a given name and a hereditary title. The word derives from the Arabic verb sāda (to rule), reflect...
Scaevola is the cognomen of a prominent Roman family, best known as the Latin form of the Italian Scevola. The name derives from the Latin adjective scaevus, meaning "left-handed" or "left-sided". According to legend, th...
Səccad is the Azerbaijani form of Sajjad, an Arabic name derived from the root سجد (sajada), meaning "to bow down, to prostrate." The name thus carries a deeply religious connotation, referring to one who frequently perf...
EtymologyScevola is the Italian form of the Roman cognomen Scaevola, which derives from the Latin scaevus meaning "left-handed" or "left-sided." The name is famously associated with the legendary Roman hero Gaius Muc ius...
Scipio is a masculine given name of Roman origin, derived from the Latin scīpiō meaning "staff, walking stick". This word is of uncertain etymology but may be connected to Proto-Indo-European *skap-, making it cognate wi...
Scipione is the Italian form of Scipio, a Roman cognomen derived from Latin scipio meaning "staff, walking stick." The name is historically associated with the illustrious Scipio family of ancient Rome, particularly Publ...
Scorpio is a Latin masculine name meaning "scorpion", derived from the Greek σκορπίος (skorpios). It is most famously known as the name of the eighth sign of the zodiac, associated with the constellation Scorpius. Etymol...
IntroductionScorpius is a name derived directly from a Latin variant of Scorpio, the Latin word for "scorpion". It is best known as the name of a prominent zodiac constellation, the eighth sign of the zodiac, located in...
Scot is a variant form of Scott, an English and Scottish surname turned given name. The name ultimately derives from the Latin Scoti, a term used by the Romans to refer to the Gaelic-speaking peoples of Ireland and later...
Scott is a primarily masculine given name derived from the Scottish surname Scott (also spelled as a variant, Scot). The surname originated as an ethnic name for a person from Scotland or a Scottish Gaelic speaker, stemm...
Scotty is an English masculine diminutive of Scott. The name Scott originated as an ethnic surname for a person from Scotland or a speaker of Scottish Gaelic, derived from Latin Scoti meaning "Gael, Gaelic speaker," with...
Sé is a modern Irish given name, derived as a short form of Séaghdha. Séaghdha itself comes from the Old Irish name Ségdae, which is thought to originate from the word ségda, meaning "fine", "good", "favourable", or "lea...
Seachlann is a masculine given name of Irish origin. It is a metathesized variant of Seachnall, sharing the same etymological roots and historical associations.EtymologySeachlann derives ultimately from the Roman praenom...
Seachnall is an Irish male given name, possibly an Irish form of the Latin name Secundinus. The name is closely associated with a 5th-century Irish saint known as both Seachnall and Secundinus, who was a disciple of Sain...
Etymology and MeaningSead is a Bosnian masculine given name, derived from the Arabic name Sa'id. The root meaning of Sa'id is "happy, lucky" in Arabic, originating from the verb saʿida meaning "to be happy, to be lucky."...
Séafra is the Irish form of Geoffrey, a name introduced to Ireland through Norman influence. It derives from the same Germanic roots as Geoffrey, with the second element coming from Old German fridu meaning "peace". The...
Seaghdh is the Scottish Gaelic form of Séaghdha, an Irish name with deep roots in early medieval Gaelic culture. The name derives from the Old Irish Ségdae, which itself is likely based on the adjective ségda, meaning "f...
EtymologySéaghdha is an Irish given name, derived from the Old Irish Ségdae, which in turn comes from the adjective ségda meaning "fine, good, favourable, learned". The name reflects qualities of excellence and wisdom, a...
Séamas is the Irish form of James. It is a variant of the more widely known Séamus, both deriving from the Latin Iacomus, itself a variant of Iacobus (the Biblical Latin form of Jacob). The ultimate root is the Hebrew Ya...
Séamus (Irish pronunciation: [ˈʃeːmˠəsˠ]) is an Irish male given name and the Irish equivalent of James. Of Hebrew origin through Latin, it entered the Irish and Scottish Gaelic languages from the French variation of the...
Seán is the Irish form of John, derived from the Old French Jehan. In Hiberno-English it is also anglicized as Shaun, Shawn, or Shon, while the Ulster variant Séan gives rise to Shane or Shayne. The grave accent (síneadh...
Sean is an Anglicized form of the Irish name Seán. This name, along with variants Shawn and Shaun, began to be used in the English-speaking world outside of Ireland around the middle of the 20th century. The name ultimat...
Seanán is the modern Irish form of the name Senán. The root name Senán means "little old one" in Old Irish, derived from sen "old" combined with a diminutive suffix. Saint Senán was a 6th-century monk who founded the mon...
Séarlas is the Irish form of Charles. It is a masculine given name used primarily in Ireland, where it has been adopted as the Gaelic equivalent of the English Charles.EtymologyThe name Séarlas derives from the Old North...
Sebastiaan is the Dutch form of the masculine given name Sebastian. The name ultimately derives from the Latin Sebastianus, meaning “from Sebaste.” Sebaste was a city in Asia Minor (modern-day Sivas, Turkey), whose name...
Sebastián is the Spanish and Czech form of the Latin name Sebastianus, which ultimately derives from the Greek word σεβαστός (sebastos) meaning “venerable.” This term was used as a Greek translation of the Roman title Au...
Sebastian is a masculine given name used widely across Europe, particularly in Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, German, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, and Swedish contexts.EtymologyThe name derives from the Latin Sebastian...
Sebastiano is the Italian form of the Latin name Sebastianus, which ultimately derives from the Greek sebastos (σεβαστός) meaning "venerable." This Greek word was used as a translation of the Roman imperial title Augustu...
Sebastianus is the Latin form of Sebastian. The name derives from the Roman cognomen Sebastianus, meaning "from Sebaste." Sebaste was a city in Asia Minor (modern-day Sivas, Turkey), whose name in turn comes from Greek σ...
Sebastião is the Portuguese form of Sebastian, derived from the Latin name Sebastianus, which meant "from Sebaste." Sebaste was a city in Asia Minor (modern-day Sivas, Turkey), whose name originates from the Greek σεβαστ...
Sébastien is a common French given name, derived from the Latin name Sebastianus, which means "from Sebaste." Sebaste was a city in Asia Minor (modern-day Sivas, Turkey), whose name itself comes from the Greek word σεβασ...