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15,656Wincenty is the Polish form of Vincent, a name derived from the Roman name Vincentius, which itself comes from the Latin vinco meaning "to conquer" or "to win". This masculine name has a rich Christian heritage, as Saint...
Wine is an Anglo-Saxon masculine given name derived from the Old English element wine meaning "friend". This element appears as a short form in many compound names such as Aldwin ("old friend") or Godwin ("good friend")....
Winfield is an English first name, historically derived from a surname. The surname Winfield itself originates from various place names in England, such as Winfield in Derbyshire and perhaps other locations, and is compo...
Winfred is an English male given name, derived from the Old English elements wine (meaning "friend") and friþ (meaning "peace"), thus translating to "friend of peace." The name has a notable historical connection as the...
Winfrið is the Old English form of the name Winfred, derived from the elements wine (meaning "friend") and friþ (meaning "peace"). This Anglo-Saxon name thus carried the literal sense of "friend of peace" long before the...
Winfried is a masculine German given name. It is the German form of Winfred, which itself derives from the Old English elements wine meaning “friend” and friþ meaning “peace,” thus conveying the meaning “friend of peace....
Winfrith is a variant of the Old English name Winfrið, which in turn is the ancestor of the modern name Winfred. The name means "friend of peace," derived from the Old English elements wine "friend" and friþ "peace". Win...
Winifrid is the Old German cognate of the Old English name Winfrið, which became Winfred in modern English. The name is composed of the Old English elements wine meaning "friend" and friþ meaning "peace", thus carrying t...
Winnetou is a fictional Native American hero created by the German author Karl May, first appearing in his 1875 novel Old Firehand. The name itself was invented by May and does not derive from any Native American languag...
EtymologyWinoc is a variant of the Breton name Gwenneg, which is derived from the Breton word gwenn meaning "white, blessed" combined with a diminutive suffix. The name is closely associated with Saint Gwenneg, an 8th-ce...
Winston is a masculine given name of English origin, ultimately derived from a surname. The surname Winston itself originates from Winstone, a place name in Gloucestershire, England, which likely comes from the Old Engli...
Winthrop is an English masculine given name, derived from a surname that originated as a place name in Old English. It either combines the Old English element wine, meaning “friend,” with þorp (village), thus signifying...
Winton is an English masculine given name derived from a surname, which in turn originated as a place name. The place name is composed of the Old English elements either the personal name Wine, possibly combined with win...
Wira is a masculine given name used in Indonesia and Malaysia, meaning "hero" in both Indonesian and Malay. The name derives from the Sanskrit word vīra (वीर), which also means "hero" or "brave," and is related to the La...
Wirat is a Thai masculine given name that embodies moral and spiritual ideals. It means "pure, chaste, abstinent" in Thai, deriving from Sanskrit विरति (virati), which signifies "ceasing" or "abstinence." The name thus r...
Wiremu is a masculine given name, the Māori form of William. Etymology and OriginsThe English name William derives from the Germanic elements willo (“will, desire”) and helm (“helmet, protection”), giving the meaning “wi...
Wischard is the Norman form of Guiscard. The name originates from the Old Norse element vizkr meaning "wise" combined with the Old French pejorative suffix -ard, derived from the Old Frankish hard meaning "hard, firm, br...
Wisław (pronounced VIS-waf) is a Polish masculine given name. It is a contracted form of Witosław, which itself derives from the old Slavic name Vítězslav. The root elements combine vitati “to welcome, to greet” or vit...
Wit is a Polish masculine given name, typically understood as a form of Vitus. However, the name's history involves a long-standing confusion between the Latin Vitus (from vita “life”) and the Germanic Wido (from a root...
Witek is a Polish diminutive of the given names Witold or Wit. While primarily a first name, it can also function as a surname; notable bearers include several American, Polish, and other international figures. Etymology...
Witołd is a Polish variant of the name Witold. The name Witold itself has two possible origins: it can be the Polish form of the Lithuanian name Vytautas, or it may derive from the Old German name Widald. In the Lithuani...
Witold is a masculine Polish given name. It is primarily the Polish form of the Lithuanian name Vytautas, but it may also derive from the Old Germanic name Widald, composed of elements meaning "wood" or "forest" and "rul...
Witosław is a Polish masculine given name and also a surname, derived from the Slavic compound name Vítězslav. The root elements of Vítězslav are vitati meaning "to welcome, to greet" or vitŭ meaning "master, lord", comb...
Władek is a Polish diminutive of the given name Władysław, used affectionately or informally. The name derives from the Old Slavic root Vladislav, composed of the elements volděti "to rule" and slava "glory," thus carryi...
Władysław is the Polish form of Vladislav, a name of Old Slavic origin derived from the elements volděti "to rule" and slava "glory". The name was borne by four kings of Poland, as well as numerous other Slavic rulers th...
Włodek is a Polish diminutive of the male given name Włodzimierz, which is itself the Polish cognate of Vladimir. The name Włodek is formed by clipping Włodzimierz and adding the diminutive suffix -ek, a common pattern i...
Włodzimierz is the Polish cognate of the Slavic name Vladimir. The name is composed from the Old Slavic elements volděti meaning "to rule" and měrŭ meaning "great, famous", though a later association with mirŭ (meaning "...
Włodzisław is an Old Polish form of the Slavic name Vladislav. It derives from the elements volděti "to rule" and slava "glory", meaning "one who rules with glory" or "he who owns glory". This name belongs to the widespr...
Wob is a Frisian diminutive of Germanic names beginning with the element walt meaning "power, authority." As a short form, it was typically used as a nickname or pet name for longer names such as Waldebert or Gaubert (th...
Wobbe is a Frisian masculine given name, originally a short form of the Germanic name Waldebert (and other compound names beginning with the Old German element walt meaning "power, authority" and a second element startin...
Wodan is the Old High German form of the reconstructed Proto-Germanic name Wōdanaz, meaning "lord of frenzy" or "leader of the possessed," from which the better-known Odin also derives. As the chief god of the Germanic p...
Wōdanaz is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic theonym from which the names Odin, Wodan, and Woden derive. The name is linguistically reconstructed from later attestations across Germanic languages, most notably Old Norse Ó...
Woden is the Anglo-Saxon form of the Proto-Germanic god *Wōdanaz, equivalent to the Norse Odin. In Old English sources, he is depicted as a war god and the ancestor of several royal dynasties, notably in the Anglo-Saxon...
Wojciech is a Polish given name derived from the Slavic elements vojĭ ("warrior, soldier") and utěxa ("solace, comfort, joy"), often interpreted as "he who enjoys war" or "joyous warrior." The name became widely known th...
Wojsław is a Polish masculine given name, derived from the Slavic elements vojĭ ("warrior, soldier") and slava ("glory, fame"), carrying the meaning of "glory of warriors" or "famous soldier." It is the Polish form of th...
Wojtek is a Polish diminutive of Wojciech, equivalent to nicknames like "Vojta" in Czech. While originally a pet form, Wojtek has become an independent given name in its own right, particularly famous in Poland due to a...
Wolf is a male given name used in English, German, Yiddish, and other Germanic contexts. Primarily, it originates as a short form of compound names such as Wolfgang and Wolfram, which contain the Old German element wolf...
Wolfdietrich is a masculine compound name from Germanic elements: Wolf meaning "wolf" and Dietrich meaning "ruler of the people". It is most famously the name of the titular hero of a 13th-century Middle High German epic...
Wolfe is a masculine given name of English origin. It is a variant of the name Wolf, influenced by the spelling of the surname Wolfe (which is itself derived from the animal). The name ultimately traces back through the...
Wolfgang is a German masculine given name of Old High German origin. It combines the elements wolf (meaning "wolf") and gang (meaning "path", "way", or "journey"), giving the overall sense of "wolf path" or "journey of t...
Wolfhard is a masculine given name derived from the Old German elements wolf meaning "wolf" and hart meaning "hard, firm, brave, hardy." As a compound name, it reflects the Germanic naming tradition of combining animal s...
Wolfram is a German given name and surname of Germanic origin.EtymologyThe name is composed of the Old German elements wolf meaning "wolf" and hram meaning "raven". Both wolf and raven are significant animals in Germanic...
Wöllem is a Limburgish form of the name William. Limburgish is a Low Franconian language spoken in the Dutch province of Limburg and adjacent parts of Germany and Belgium. The name Wöllem reflects the regional phonetic a...
Wolodymyr is an alternate transcription of the Ukrainian name Volodymyr, itself the Ukrainian form of Vladimir. The ultimate root, Vladimir, derives from the Old Slavic elements volděti 'to rule' and měrŭ 'great, famous'...
Wolter is a Dutch given name and surname of Low German and Low Franconian origin, serving as a variant form of Walter. It ultimately derives from the Germanic name Waltheri, composed of the elements walt meaning "power,...
Woodie is a variant of Woody, an English given name that functions as a diminutive of names containing wood, such as Woodrow, or as a nickname derived from the English word wood. As such, Woodie carries the same connotat...
Woodrow is an English given name and surname that originally derived from a place name, meaning "row of houses by a wood" in Old English. It is composed of the Old English elements wudu (wood) and rǣw or rāw (row, as in...
Woody is an English masculine given name that originated as a diminutive or pet form of names containing the element wood, such as Woodrow, Elwood, or Heywood. It can also be derived directly from a nickname based on the...
Woo-jin (우진) is a Korean given name. In 2008, it was the fifth most popular name for baby boys in South Korea, with 1,811 given the name that year. The name is an alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 우진, and its...
Workneh is an Ethiopian masculine given name of Amharic origin. It means "you are gold", derived from the Amharic word ወርቅ (warq) meaning "gold". The name is a phrase that expresses value and preciousness, addressing the...
Wotan is a variant of Wodan, the Old High German form of the Proto-Germanic supreme god *Wōdanaz. The name is closely related to the better-known Norse deity Odin, and its meaning derives from the Germanic root *wōþuz, s...
Wout is a Dutch masculine given name, primarily used as a short form of Wouter. Wouter itself is the Dutch equivalent of Walter, which traces its roots to the Germanic elements walt meaning "power" or "authority" and her...
Wouter is a Dutch masculine given name, popular in the Netherlands and Belgium, that serves as the Dutch form of Walter. The name Walter itself derives from the Germanic name Waltheri, composed of the elements walt “powe...
Wright is an English masculine given name derived from an occupational surname meaning "craftsman", ultimately from Old English wyrhta. The surname originated in England and Scotland, referred originally (c. 700 AD) to a...
Wubbe is a masculine Frisian given name, serving as a variant of Wobbe. Wobbe itself originated as a Frisian short form of Waldebert and other names beginning with the Old German element walt meaning "power, authority" c...
Wukong is the name of the Monkey King, Sun Wukong, the central character in the 16th-century Chinese novel Journey to the West. The name is derived from the Chinese words 悟 (wu, meaning "enlightenment" or "awakening") a...
Wulf is a Germanic masculine name derived from the Old High German word for "wolf." It represents a direct variant of the more common Wolf, which itself often serves as a short form of compound names like Wolfgang or Wol...
Wulfgang is the Old German form of Wolfgang, a classic Germanic compound name. The name Wolfgang itself derives from the Old German elements wolf meaning "wolf" and gang meaning "path, way," thus conveying the sense of "...
Etymology and OriginsWulfhard is an Old German name composed of the elements wolf meaning "wolf" and hart meaning "hard, firm, brave, hardy". This name represents an early Germanic form of Wolfhard, which later underwent...
Wulfhram is an Old German name that evolved into the more familiar Wolfram. It is composed of the elements wolf meaning "wolf" and hram meaning "raven", symbolizing strength, cunning, and perhaps a connection to the batt...