Browse Names
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289 names in our directory
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289Róza is a Hungarian variant of Rózsa, meaning "rose." While Rózsa is the standard Hungarian form, Róza represents a slightly different - but closely related - rendering. The name ultimately traces back to the Latin rosa,...
Rozália is the Hungarian and Slovak form of Rosalia. The name Rosalia is a Late Latin derivation from rosa, the Latin word for “rose.” This floral association gives Rozália a natural and elegant symbolism, linking it to...
Rozina is a feminine given name, primarily recognized as the Hungarian form of Rosina, which itself is an Italian diminutive of Rosa, meaning "rose" in Latin. Despite its Latin association, the name Rosa may also have ro...
Rózsa is a Hungarian female given name and surname meaning "rose" in Hungarian. It is a cognate of Rosa 1, which is generally derived from Latin rosa meaning "rose", though the Latin name may also have been influenced by...
Rózsi is a Hungarian diminutive of Rózsa, which itself means "rose" in Hungarian. The name Rózsa is a cognate of Rosa 1, derived from the Latin word rosa meaning "rose". The ultimate origin may also be influenced by the...
Sára is the Hungarian, Czech, and Slovak form of Sarah. Like its biblical counterpart, the name derives from the Hebrew שָׂרָה (Sara), meaning "lady, princess, noblewoman". This deep-rooted etymology ties Sára directly t...
Sári is the Hungarian diminutive of Sarah. This affectionate form is widely used in Hungary as an independent given name, reflecting a common pattern in Hungarian onomastics where names are shortened and end in a vowel,...
Sárika is a Hungarian diminutive of Sarah. The name Sarah itself originates from the Hebrew word "שָׂרָה" meaning "lady, princess, noblewoman." In the Old Testament, Sarah was the wife of Abraham and the matriarch of the...
Sarolt is a Hungarian feminine name, derived from the Old Hungarian name Saroldu, which is probably of Turkic origin meaning "white weasel, ermine". This regal name belonged to Sarolt (c. 950 – c. 1008), the wife of Géza...
Sarolta is a Hungarian feminine given name. It is a variant of the Old Hungarian name Sarolt, which is derived from the Turkic word meaning "white weasel" or "ermine". Sarolta is also commonly used as the Hungarian form...
Stefánia is the Hungarian feminine form of Stephen, derived from the Greek name Στέφανος (Stephanos), meaning "crown" or "wreath". The name entered Hungarian via the popularity of Stephen (István), the first Christian ki...
Szabina is a Hungarian feminine given name, the local form of Sabina. The name ultimately derives from the Latin Sabinus, a cognomen meaning "a Sabine" — referring to an ancient Italic people who lived in central Italy b...
Szandra is a Hungarian short form of Alexandra. As a feminine given name, it is primarily used in Hungary and carries the same meaning as its root name, which is "defender of mankind," derived from the Greek elements ale...
Szilvia is the Hungarian spelling of Silvia, a name of Latin origin popularized across Europe through different linguistic adaptations. The root is the feminine form of Silvius, a Roman family name derived from Latin sil...
Szimonetta is the Hungarian form of Simonetta. The name thus ultimately traces its roots through a chain of related names to the Simon 1 lineage, derived from the Hebrew name Shimʿon, meaning "hearing" or "listening," an...
Szofi is a Hungarian feminine given name, a unique adaptation of Sophie that reflects the French pronunciation of the name. It is a variant of the more common Hungarian form Zsófia, though Szofi offers a more direct phon...
Szófia is a Hungarian variant of Zsófia, which itself is the Hungarian form of the Greek name Sophia, meaning "wisdom." In Hungarian, Szófia is also the name of the capital of Bulgaria, Sofia, but as a personal name it f...
Szonja is the Hungarian form of Sonya, a Russian diminutive ultimately derived from the Greek name Sophia, meaning "wisdom".Etymology and Cultural ContextThe name traces back through a chain of linguistic adaptation: fro...
Tamara is a feminine given name that serves as the Russian form of Tamar. The name Tamar comes from Hebrew and Arabic, meaning "palm tree" or "date fruit," derived from the common Arabic word tamr (تَمْر), with tamra (تَ...
Teca is a Hungarian diminutive of Terézia, the Hungarian form of Theresa. This affectionate clipping, formed with the suffix -ca, is pronounced [ˈtɛt͡sɒ] in Hungarian, with stress on the first syllable. It is equivalent...
Tekla is the form of Thekla used in Georgian, Hungarian, Latvian, Polish, and Swedish.Etymology and OriginsThe name derives from the ancient Greek Theokleia (Θεόκλεια), meaning “glory of God,” composed of the elements th...
Teodóra is the Hungarian feminine form of Theodore. The name originates from the Greek Θεόδωρος (Theodoros), a compound of θεός (theos) “god” and δῶρον (doron) “gift,” thus meaning “gift of god.” The feminine counterpart...
Teréz is a Hungarian short form of Terézia, which itself is the Hungarian and Slovak form of Theresa. Theresa originates from the Spanish and Portuguese name Teresa, first recorded as Therasia — likely derived from the G...
Terézia is the Hungarian and Slovak form of Theresa, derived from the Spanish and Portuguese name Teresa. The earliest recorded form is Therasia, borne by the Spanish wife of Saint Paulinus of Nola in the 4th century. Th...
Tímea is a Hungarian female given name created by the prominent Hungarian author Mór Jókai for a character in his 1873 novel The Golden Man (original Hungarian title: Az arany ember). The name is derived from the Greek w...
Tünde [ˈtyndɛ] is a Hungarian feminine given name, derived from the Hungarian word tündér meaning "fairy". This name was coined by the Hungarian poet Mihály Vörösmarty in the 19th century for his dramatic poem Csongor és...
Tündér is a distinctive Hungarian feminine given name that translates directly to "fairy." The name stems from native Hungarian mythology and folklore, where tündérek (the plural form) are often benevolent, otherworldly...
Valéria is a feminine given name used in Portuguese, Hungarian, and Slovak, serving as the form of Valeria in these languages. It ultimately derives from the Roman family name Valerius, which is rooted in Latin valeo mea...
Vanda is a feminine given name used in several European languages, including Czech, Hungarian, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Portuguese, and Slovak. It is a form of the name Wanda, which itself likely derives from a Germ...
Vanessza is a Hungarian feminine given name, serving as the Hungarian form of the well-known name Vanessa. The root name Vanessa was famously invented by the Anglo-Irish author Jonathan Swift for his 1726 poem Cadenus an...
Vera is a feminine given name widely used across multiple languages and cultures. In Russian, it means "faith" (from the word вера), while it is also often associated with the Latin adjective verus, meaning "true." This...
Etymology Veronika is the form of Veronica used across many languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, German, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Russian, Slovak, Slovene, Swed...
Viktória is the Hungarian and Slovak form of Victoria, a name derived from Latin victoria meaning "victory." The name ultimately traces back to the Roman goddess of victory, Victoria, who was the equivalent of the Greek...
Vilma is a feminine given name used in several European languages, including Croatian, Czech, Danish, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Slovak, Spanish, and Swedish. It is the local...
Viola is a feminine name meaning "violet" in Latin, derived from the classical Latin word for the flower. The name is used across multiple European languages, including Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, German, Hungarian,...
Violetta is a feminine given name used in Italian, Russian, Ukrainian, and Hungarian, among other languages. It is the direct form of Violet, the English name derived from the flower, which ultimately comes from Latin vi...
Virág is a Hungarian feminine given name and surname, meaning "flower" in Hungarian. The name is deeply rooted in the Hungarian language and culture, where nature-inspired names are common. As a given name, Virág reflect...
Vivien 2 is a female given name used in Hungarian and literature.EtymologyAlfred Tennyson introduced the name Vivien in his Arthurian epic Idylls of the King (1859), where it designates the Lady of the Lake. The exact in...
Zita 2 is a Hungarian diminutive of Felicitás, the Hungarian form of the Latin name Felicitas, meaning "good luck, fortune." The root name Felicitas originates from Roman mythology, where the goddess Felicitas personifie...
Zoé is the French and Hungarian form of Zoe, a name that means “life” in Greek. The name Zoe was adopted by Hellenized Jews as a translation of Eve, connecting it to the biblical concept of life. Early Christian saints n...
Zsanett is the Hungarian form of Jeannette, itself a French diminutive of Jeanne, which is the modern French form of Jehanne, an Old French feminine form of Iohannes (see John). The name ultimately derives from the Hebre...
Zsazsa is a Hungarian diminutive of Zsuzsanna, the Hungarian form of Susanna. The name ultimately derives from the Hebrew Shoshanna meaning "lily" or, in modern Hebrew, "rose"; it may trace further back to the Egyptian w...
Zselyke is a Hungarian female given name, likely derived as a form of Željka, which ultimately traces back to the South Slavic Željko, from the element želěti meaning "desire".Etymology and OriginsThe name is rooted in t...
Zsófia is the Hungarian form of Sophia, a name with deep historical and cultural roots. Derived from Greek Sophia, meaning "wisdom," it shares its lineage with a classic name that has been borne by saints, royalty, and n...
Zsófika is a Hungarian feminine given name, functioning as a diminutive of Zsófia. It carries an affectionate, endearing connotation, often used for young girls or as a term of familiarity. The name Zsófia itself is the...
Zsóka is a Hungarian feminine given name, functioning as a diminutive of Erzsébet (the Hungarian form of Elizabeth) or Zsófia (the Hungarian form of Sophia). The name carries the affectionate, familiar tone common to Hun...
Zsuzsa is the Hungarian diminutive of Zsuzsanna, which itself is the Hungarian form of Susanna. The name is pronounced [ˈʒuʒɒ] in Hungarian and is often used as an independent given name equivalent to the English Susan....
Zsuzsanna is the Hungarian form of Susanna, a feminine given name of Hebrew origin. The name ultimately derives from the Hebrew word שושן (shoshan), meaning 'lily' or, in modern Hebrew, 'rose,' possibly tracing back to t...
Zsuzsi is a Hungarian diminutive of Zsuzsanna, the Hungarian form of Susanna. The name thus traces its roots to the Hebrew Shoshanna, meaning "lily" or "rose," ultimately from an Egyptian word for "lotus." Etymology and...