Names Starting with I

Browse 200 beautiful baby names beginning with the letter I. Discover I names for boys and girls with meanings, origins, and cultural significance.

200 total names
200 boy names
200 girl names
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Ivory

This name came into the English language around a mid-13th-Century (late 12th-Century as a surname). It comes from the Anglo-French “ivorie,” from the Old North French “ivurie” through the Latin “eboreus” (of ivory), from “ebur” (genitive “eboris”). In turn, it seems to derive from the Egyptian word “ab” (elephant), Coptic “ebu” (ivory).

Girl

Isabella

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ib

This name derives from the Late Latin “Iacobus,” from the Ancient Greek “Iákōbos (Ἰάκωβος),” meaning “supplanter, held by the heel, heel-grabber, leg-puller.” In turn, the name derives from the Hebrew root “ʿqb > Yaʿakov,” meaning “to follow, to be behind,” and it referred to the circumstances of Jacob’s birth when he held on to the heel (Hebrew: ʿaqeb) of his older twin brother Esau. As described in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob, the Talmud, the New Testament, the Koran, and the scriptures of Baha’i as the third patriarch of the Jewish people with whom God made a covenant and ancestor of the tribes of Israel, who took their names from his descendants. In the Hebrew Bible, Jacob is Isaac and Rebecca’s son, and grandson of Abraham, Sarah, and Bethuel. Jacob is honored as a prophet of Islam; in fact, the name is commonly used as a baptismal name in Arabic and Muslim societies.

hebrew
Boy

Io

Io (Ancient Greek: Ἰώ) was, in Greek mythology, a priestess of Hera in Argos, a nymph who was seduced by Zeus, who changed her into a heifer to escape detection. His wife Hera sent ever-watchful Argus Panoptes, with 100 eyes, to watch her, but Hermes was sent to distract the guardian and slay him. Heifer Io was loosed to roam the world, stung by a maddening gadfly sent by Hera, and wandered to Egypt, thus placing her descendant Belus in Egypt; his sons Cadmus (Cadmus was also named as a son of Belus' brother Agenor) and Danaus would then "return" to mainland Greece. In the 2010 film Clash of the Titans, Io was portrayed by British actress Gemma Arterton. The meaning of the name is unknown.

greek
Girl

Ian

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ica

This name derives from the Ancient Greek: “Helenē (‘Ελενη) / Helénē (Ἑλένη),” meaning “torch, flambeau, brilliant, shining light, the bright one.” The name could be related to “Hḗlios (Ἥλιος),” the personification of the Sun in Greek mythology. In Greek mythology, Helen of Troy was the daughter of Zeus and wife of Menelaus, King of Sparta, and considered the most beautiful woman in the world. Early Christians widely used the name through Saint Helen, the mother of Emperor Constantine I, who, according to legend, found a piece of the cross of Jesus Christ during his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Hermione was the only child of King Menelaus of Sparta and his wife, Helen of Troy.

greek
Girl

Ico

It is a Christian baptismal name associated mainly with the Slavic languages. It is the Slavic variant of the names “Johanna” and “Joannes.” The name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn derives from the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan,” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations between males and females in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ida

This name derives from the short form of obsolete names beginning with the Ancient Germanic element “īd,” meaning “work,” used for both sexes in medieval England. It was revived in the 19th-century, partly mistaken for a Greek name, for the Mount Ida of classical mythology.

germanic
Girl

Ido

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘iddô > Iddó̱,” meaning “his witness, I will praise him.” Iddo or Eido was a minor biblical prophet who appears to have lived during the reigns of King Solomon and his heirs, Rehoboam and Abijah, in the Kingdom of Judah.

hebrew
Boy

Ifi

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Íphis (Ἶφις),” from “îphi (ἶφι) Ī́phidos (Ἴφιδος),” meaning “strong, might.” Iphis was a name attributed to eight individuals in Greek mythology. Some of them were: 1) According to the Roman poet Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Iphis (or Iphys) was the daughter of Telethusa and Ligdus in Crete. 2) One of the daughters of Thespius and Megamede. She bore Heracles a son, Celeustanor. 3) Daughter of Peneus, mother of Salmoneus by Aeolus, the son of Hellen.

greek
Girl

Iga

Iga is a diminutive of Jadwiga and Ignacja. It is of Etruscan and Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (EGNĀTĬUS) and (HADEWIG).

germanic
Girl

Ige

born feet first

african (yorùbá)
Girl

Igi

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Igo

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Ijo

Io (Ancient Greek: Ἰώ) was, in Greek mythology, a priestess of Hera in Argos, a nymph who was seduced by Zeus, who changed her into a heifer to escape detection. His wife Hera sent ever-watchful Argus Panoptes, with 100 eyes, to watch her, but Hermes was sent to distract the guardian and slay him. Heifer Io was loosed to roam the world, stung by a maddening gadfly sent by Hera, and wandered to Egypt, thus placing her descendant Belus in Egypt; his sons Cadmus (Cadmus was also named as a son of Belus' brother Agenor) and Danaus would then "return" to mainland Greece. In the 2010 film Clash of the Titans, Io was portrayed by British actress Gemma Arterton. The meaning of the name is unknown.

greek
Girl

Ika

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Phereníkē (Φερενίκη) Bereníke (Bερενίκη),” composed of two elements: “phérō (φέρω) phérein (φέρειν)” (to bring, bear, carry) plus “nī́kē ‎(νῑ́κη)” (victory, success). In turn, the name means “she who brings victory.” She who brings victory (influenced by the Church Latin phrase “vera icon” (true image) associated with the legend of Saint Veronica who wiped the face of Jesus on the way to Calvary). Sometimes it was thought that Veronica mistakenly derived from the Latin “vera” (true) and the Greek. Eikóna “εικόνα” (image). Its popularity in medieval and modern times is based mainly on the relevance in Christianity of St. Veronica and her Veil. The ancient Macedonian form of the name has been made famous by its widespread use as a royal name by the ruling dynasties of Alexander the Great states throughout the eastern Mediterranean in the Hellenistic period, in particular by the Ptolemies of Egypt and the Seleucids of Asia.

greek
Girl

Ike

This name derives from the Hebrew “Yiṣḥāq > Yitschâq,” Biblical Greek: Isaā́k (Ἰσαᾱ́κ), meaning “he laughs.” Isaac, son of Abraham by Sarah, his wife, and father of Jacob and Esau, was one of the three patriarchs in the Hebrew Bible, whose story is told in the book of Genesis. The name is derived from Judaism and is a given name among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim societies, generally in reference to the above.

hebrew
Boy

Iko

It is a Christian baptismal name associated mainly with the Slavic languages. It is the Slavic variant of the names “Johanna” and “Joannes.” The name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn derives from the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan,” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations between males and females in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iku

This name derives from the Old Norse god “Yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwaz) plus “*harjaz” (army, army leader, commander, warrior). Yngvi “Proto-Germanic (Ingwaz)” is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr. Freyr is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (God of beauty and fertility).

germanic
Boy

Ila

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Ile

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ili

Finnish name of unknown meaning. Transferred use of a surname, originally taken from the surname of the Finnish peasant rebellion leader Jaakko, which is a probably related to the Finnish form of Jakob.

finnish
Boy

Ilj

This name comes from the Latin “Aegidius,” which means “tutelage, protection,” which in turn comes from the ancient Greek “aigís (αἰγῐ́ς).” Aegis was the name of the shield of Zeus, which was made of goatskin, in fact, Herodotus brings the name back to the term “aix” (genitive: aigos), meaning “goat.” The name changed several forms, and around the eleventh century was imported by the Normans into Britain as “Giles, Gyles.” Saint Giles (~650–710 AD), also known as Giles the Hermit, was a Greek, Christian, hermit saint from Athens, whose legend is centered in Provence and Septimania.

greek
Boy

Ilo

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ils

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilu

This name derives from the Proto-Finnic “Ilma,” which means “air, space, time.” Adopted in the 19th-century as a first name, it represents the shortened from the name Ilmarinen, a skilled Kalevala blacksmith. Ilmarinen is a heroic blacksmith and made the dome of the sky, the Sampo, and various other magical devices in the Kalevala. Ilmarinen is a member of the group of heroes who steal the Sampo. Like Väinämöinen, he also has many stories told of his search for a wife, reaching the point where he forges one of gold.

finnish
Girl

Ima

This name derives from the Germanic name element “*ermunaz,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” Originally was a short form of Germanic names that began with the element “ermen,” as Ermengarde, Ermentrude, and Ermenegilda. Emma also represents a diminutive vernacular form of Emily, Emmeline, Amelia, or any other name beginning with “em.” Emma of Normandy, one of the first to be called Emma, was a daughter of Richard the Fearless, Duke of Normandy, by his second wife, Gunnora. She was queen consort of England by successive marriages: first as the second wife to Æthelred the Unready of England (1002–1016); and then the second wife of Cnut (Canute) the great of Denmark (1017–1035). She acted as regent in Wessex in 1040. The name Emma became popular in the United States later in the 20th-century, reaching the top 100 names for girls in the late 1990s and rising to second place on the popularity chart in 2013.

germanic
Girl

Ina

Ina is a Short form of several names ending in "-ina / -ine / -in / -iina," such as Ines, Georgina, Christina, Wilhelmina, Karolina, Katarina, and Nikolina, in order to create a pet and affectionate forms.

various origin
Girl

Ino

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Inṓ (Ἰνώ),” meaning “white goddess.” In Greek mythology, Ino was a mortal queen of Thebes, who, after her death and transfiguration, was worshiped as a goddess under her epithet “Leucothea.” Alcman called her “Queen of the Sea” (Greek: thalassomédousa ‘θαλασσομέδουσα’), which, if not hyperbole, would make her a doublet of Amphitrite.

greek
Girl

Iob

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘ı̂yôb > ʾiyyôḇ / ‘iyyov,” Arabic “ayyūb,” meaning “persecuted, hated.” Job is the central character of the Book of Job in the Hebrew Bible. Job is considered a prophet in Islam. The Book of Job begins with an introduction to Job’s character; he is described as a blessed man who lives righteously. God’s praise of Job prompts Satan to challenge Job’s integrity and suggesting that Job serves God simply because he protects him. God removes Job’s protection, allowing Satan to take his wealth, children, and physical health to tempt Job to curse God.

hebrew
Boy

Ion

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iov

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘ı̂yôb > ʾiyyôḇ / ‘iyyov,” Arabic “ayyūb,” meaning “persecuted, hated.” Job is the central character of the Book of Job in the Hebrew Bible. Job is considered a prophet in Islam. The Book of Job begins with an introduction to Job’s character; he is described as a blessed man who lives righteously. God’s praise of Job prompts Satan to challenge Job’s integrity and suggesting that Job serves God simply because he protects him. God removes Job’s protection, allowing Satan to take his wealth, children, and physical health to tempt Job to curse God.

hebrew
Boy

Ira

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” The Roman equivalent was “Pax.” Eirene in Greek Mythology was one of the Horae and the personification of peace. She is sometimes said to be the daughter of Zeus and Themis. Irene and its variants were also the names of an 8th-century Byzantine empress, as well as several saints. The name has always been trendy among the people of the Christian faith. In English, the name “Irene” did not become common until the 19th-century. In Greek mythology, the Horae (Greek: Ὧραι, ‘seasons’) were the goddesses of the seasons and the natural portions of time.

greek
Girl

Irv

This name derives from a Scottish surname “Irvine,” meaning “green water,” from the river Irvine in Dumfriesshire. The name, in turn, is composed of two Celtic elements: “ir” (green, fresh) plus “afon” (river, water). However, wherever found, the surname can also be a developed form of the Old English pre 7th century given name “Irwyn,” originally composed of the elements “eofor,” meaning “wild boar,” and “wine,” meaning “a friend.” Clan Irvine is a lowland Scottish clan. Sometime between 1124 and 1125, Gilchrist, son of Erwini, witnessed a charter of the Lords of Galloway. The first lands by the name of Irvine were in Dumfriesshire. According to family tradition, the clan chief’s family’s origin is connected with the early Celtic monarchs of Scotland.

scottish (gaelic)
Boy

Iró

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Hḗrōs (ἥρως) Hērṓ (Ἡρώ) Hērōn (Ἥρων),” meaning “hero.” Hero of Alexandria, also known as Heron of Alexandria, was a mathematician and engineer who was active in his native city of Alexandria, Roman Egypt. He is considered the greatest experimenter of antiquity, and his work is representative of the Hellenistic scientific tradition. Iró (Ηρώ) is a Greek name that refers to a famous priestess of Afrodite, known for her beauty. Iro is one of the rare, ancient names celebrated in the Greek Orthodox calendar, although not referring to a saint. She fell in love with a young man named (Greek: Léandros “Λέανδροσ”), who lived on the other side of the sea. The name is also a character in William Shakespeare’s 1599 play “Much Ado About Nothing.”

greek
Girl

Isa

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ise

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Girl

Isi

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

native american
Girl

Iso

This name derives from the Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Greek root “Îsis (Ἶσις) Ísida (Ίσιδα) dôron ‎(δῶρον),” meaning “gift of Isis.” Isis was the goddess of magic, and she is the most powerful of goddesses in Ancient Egyptian religion, and whose worship also spread throughout the Greco-Roman world. She was worshipped as the ideal mother and wife as well as the patron of nature and magic. Saint Isidore of Seville (Spanish: San Isidro or San Isidoro de Sevilla, Latin: Isidorus Hispalensis) (~560–636) served as Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades and is considered, as the historian Montalembert put it in an oft-quoted phrase, “the last scholar of the ancient world.”

greek
Boy

Iva

It is a Christian baptismal name associated mainly with the Slavic languages. It is the Slavic variant of the names “Johanna” and “Joannes.” The name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn derives from the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan,” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations between males and females in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Girl

Ivi

This name derives from the Hebrew “ḥawwah,” which is based on the Hebrew word “chavvâh,” meaning “to breathe or live, living.” The name has religious significance in the Judeo, Christian, Muslim tradition, after Eve’s use as the Biblical Adam’s female companion. Its use as a first name in England began in the 12th-Century. “Eva,” popular in many European countries, “Eve” used as an anglicized form of Gaelic Aoife “radiant, beautiful” in Scotland and Ireland and “Evie,” usually a familiar form, now also a given name.

hebrew
Girl

Ivo

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ivy

This name derives from the Germanic and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “*ibakhs > ifig,” meaning “small yellow flowers.” Ivy is an evergreen climbing in the family Araliaceae, native to western, central, southern Europe, Macaronesia, north west Africa, and across central-southern Asia east to Japan and Taiwan.

old english (anglo-saxon)
Girl

Iwa

This name derives from the Germanic element “iv,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*īhwaz” (yew ‘tree’). Ivo is the Latinized form of a medieval name of Old French origin, Cognate with modern French Yves. Saint Ivo of Kermartin was a parish priest among the poor of Louannec, the only one of his station to be canonized in the Middle Ages. He is the patron of Brittany, lawyers, and abandoned children. His feast day is May 19. Poetically, he is referred to as “Advocate of the Poor.” Ivo could also be correlated with the Celtic “Ivo,” one of the ancient Celts sacred trees.

germanic
Girl

Iwo

This name derives from the Germanic element “iv,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*īhwaz” (yew ‘tree’). Ivo is the Latinized form of a medieval name of Old French origin, Cognate with modern French Yves. Saint Ivo of Kermartin was a parish priest among the poor of Louannec, the only one of his station to be canonized in the Middle Ages. He is the patron of Brittany, lawyers, and abandoned children. His feast day is May 19. Poetically, he is referred to as “Advocate of the Poor.” Ivo could also be correlated with the Celtic “Ivo,” one of the ancient Celts sacred trees.

germanic
Boy

Iya

It is a feminine name of Niger-Congo (Bantu) origin. This name derives from the African (Swahili / Kiswahili) “A-yana,” meaning “beautiful flower, wildflower, the flower of beauty.” The name is common in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Ruanda, Burundi, Somalia, Mozambique, and Malawi.

african (swahili)
Girl

Iza

The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Welsh name “Esyllt,” meaning “‘who is gazed at, of fair aspect.” 2) From the Germanic name “Ishild / Ishilde” combination of the Old High German “îsarn” (iron) plus the Ancient Germanic “*hildiz” (battle, fight). 3) From the Germanic name “Iswalde” combination of the Old High German “îsarn” (iron) plus the Ancient Germanic “*waldaʐ” (ruler, might, power). There are several characters in the Arthurian story of Tristan and Iseult. The most prominent is Iseult of Ireland, wife of Mark of Cornwall and illicit lover of Sir Tristan. Her mother, the Queen of Ireland, is also named Iseult. The third is Iseult of the White Hands, the daughter of Hoel of Brittany, sister of Sir Kahedin, and eventual wife of Tristan.

germanic
Girl

Izi

This name derives from the Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Greek root “Îsis (Ἶσις) Ísida (Ίσιδα) dôron ‎(δῶρον),” meaning “gift of Isis.” Isis was the goddess of magic, and she is the most powerful of goddesses in Ancient Egyptian religion, and whose worship also spread throughout the Greco-Roman world. She was worshipped as the ideal mother and wife as well as the patron of nature and magic. Saint Isidore of Seville (Spanish: San Isidro or San Isidoro de Sevilla, Latin: Isidorus Hispalensis) (~560–636) served as Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades and is considered, as the historian Montalembert put it in an oft-quoted phrase, “the last scholar of the ancient world.”

greek
Boy

Izo

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Boy

Iţă

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iŵl

The origin of this name is still quite uncertain today. The theories include: A) From the Late Latin “Iūlius,” meaning “youth, youthful, juvenile.” B) A supreme god from the Latin and Proto Indo-European “*djew > iou-pater > Juppĭtĕr.” Jupiter is the King of the Gods and the God of sky and thunder in Roman Religion. C) From the Ancient Greek “Íoulos (ἴουλος),” meaning “haired, bearded, downy-bearded.” The Roman and the standard meaning is “sacred to Jupiter.” The gens Julia or Iulia was one of the most ancient Patrician families in ancient Rome. Members of the gens attained the highest dignities of the state in the earliest times of the republic. Iūlius is the fifth month of the Roman calendar. The month was renamed in honor of Gaius Julius Caesar after his death and deification, as he was born in this month. In republican Rome, the month was formally known as Quintilis, “fifth.” 1) Julius Caesar (100–44 BC) was a Roman general, statesman, Consul, and notable author of Latin prose. 2) Saint Giulia Salzano (1846–1929) was the founder of the Congregation of the Catechetical Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in 1905. The feast day is traditionally celebrated on May 17.

latin
Boy

Øiel

This name derives from the Old Norse “Eyjólfr and Eyiólfr,” composed of two elements: “*awiō > ey” (island, meadow, floodplain, water, stream, river) plus “ulfr” (wolf). In turn, the name means “the wolf of the plains, the wolf of the islands.” Often the element “ey,” as well as connected to various Germanic elements, is linked to the Old Norse “auja,” which means “gift, luck, fortune.”

old norse
Boy

İbo

This name derives from the Hebrew “ʾAḇrāhām > Avraham,” meaning “High Father, Father of a multitude, many nations.” Abraham was the Biblical patriarch and the father of the Abrahamic Religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In Judaism, Abraham is the founding father of the Covenant, the special relationship between the Jewish people and God. In Jewish tradition, Abraham is called Avraham Avinu, “our father Abraham,” signifying that he is both the biological progenitor of the Jews (including converts, according to Jewish tradition) and the father of Judaism, the first Jew. Abraham (Abram) does not loom so large in Christianity as he does in Judaism and Islam; it is Jesus as the Messiah, who is central to Christianity. The idea of a divine Christ is what separates Christianity from the other two religions. Islamic traditions consider Ibrāhīm (Abraham) the first Pioneer of Islam and that his purpose and mission throughout his life was to proclaim the Oneness of God.

hebrew
Boy

Iaco

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Íakkhos (Ἴακχος),” of unknown meaning, related to the Latin “Iacchus,” an alternative form of “Baccus,” the wine. In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Iacchus was a minor deity, of some cultic importance, particularly at Athens and Eleusis in connection with the Eleusinian mysteries, but without any significant mythology.

greek
Boy

Iael

This name derives from the Hebrew “yâ‛êl,” meaning “mountain goats, wild goats.” Yael or Jael (Nubian Ibex) is a woman mentioned in the Book of Judges in the Bible, as the heroine who killed Sisera to deliver Israel from the troops of King Jabin. She was the wife of Heber the Kenite. It is the Hebrew word for the “Nubian Ibex.” The Nubian ibex (Capra nubiana) is a desert-dwelling goat species found in mountainous areas of Algeria, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Egypt, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Yemen, and Sudan. It is generally considered to be a subspecies of the Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) but is sometimes explicitly regarded as distinct (Capra nubiana).

hebrew
Girl

Iago

This name derives from the Late Latin “Iacobus,” from the Ancient Greek “Iákōbos (Ἰάκωβος),” meaning “supplanter, held by the heel, heel-grabber, leg-puller.” In turn, the name derives from the Hebrew root “ʿqb > Yaʿakov,” meaning “to follow, to be behind,” and it referred to the circumstances of Jacob’s birth when he held on to the heel (Hebrew: ʿaqeb) of his older twin brother Esau. As described in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob, the Talmud, the New Testament, the Koran, and the scriptures of Baha’i as the third patriarch of the Jewish people with whom God made a covenant and ancestor of the tribes of Israel, who took their names from his descendants. In the Hebrew Bible, Jacob is Isaac and Rebecca’s son, and grandson of Abraham, Sarah, and Bethuel. Jacob is honored as a prophet of Islam; in fact, the name is commonly used as a baptismal name in Arabic and Muslim societies.

hebrew
Boy

Iain

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iair

This name derives from the Hebrew name “yâ’ı̂yr,” meaning “Yhwh will lighten, Yhwh will awaken, he shines, the one whom God exalts.” In the Old Testament is the name of a son of Manasseh and a judge of Israel. The Jairus form, derived from the Greek “Iaïros (Ἰάϊρος)”, carried by Yair, the father of a girl resurrected by Jesus in the New Testament.

hebrew
Boy

Iane

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Girl

Iara

lady of the lake

native american (tupian, guarani)
Girl

Iaso

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iasō (Ἰασώ) Iēsō (Ἰησώ).” Iaso was the Greek goddess of recovery from illness. Asclepius’s daughter, she had five sisters: Aceso, Aglæa/Ægle, Hygieia, Panacea, and Meditrina (Roman). All six were associated with some aspect of health or healing. For more information on the genealogy of Iaso, see Panacea.

greek
Girl

Iaun

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iban

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ibbe

This name derives from the Late Latin “Iacobus,” from the Ancient Greek “Iákōbos (Ἰάκωβος),” meaning “supplanter, held by the heel, heel-grabber, leg-puller.” In turn, the name derives from the Hebrew root “ʿqb > Yaʿakov,” meaning “to follow, to be behind,” and it referred to the circumstances of Jacob’s birth when he held on to the heel (Hebrew: ʿaqeb) of his older twin brother Esau. As described in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob, the Talmud, the New Testament, the Koran, and the scriptures of Baha’i as the third patriarch of the Jewish people with whom God made a covenant and ancestor of the tribes of Israel, who took their names from his descendants. In the Hebrew Bible, Jacob is Isaac and Rebecca’s son, and grandson of Abraham, Sarah, and Bethuel. Jacob is honored as a prophet of Islam; in fact, the name is commonly used as a baptismal name in Arabic and Muslim societies.

hebrew
Boy

Ibbo

This name derives from the Late Latin “Iacobus,” from the Ancient Greek “Iákōbos (Ἰάκωβος),” meaning “supplanter, held by the heel, heel-grabber, leg-puller.” In turn, the name derives from the Hebrew root “ʿqb > Yaʿakov,” meaning “to follow, to be behind,” and it referred to the circumstances of Jacob’s birth when he held on to the heel (Hebrew: ʿaqeb) of his older twin brother Esau. As described in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob, the Talmud, the New Testament, the Koran, and the scriptures of Baha’i as the third patriarch of the Jewish people with whom God made a covenant and ancestor of the tribes of Israel, who took their names from his descendants. In the Hebrew Bible, Jacob is Isaac and Rebecca’s son, and grandson of Abraham, Sarah, and Bethuel. Jacob is honored as a prophet of Islam; in fact, the name is commonly used as a baptismal name in Arabic and Muslim societies.

hebrew
Boy

Iben

This name derives from the Germanic element “iv,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*īhwaz” (yew ‘tree’). Ivo is the Latinized form of a medieval name of Old French origin, Cognate with modern French Yves. Saint Ivo of Kermartin was a parish priest among the poor of Louannec, the only one of his station to be canonized in the Middle Ages. He is the patron of Brittany, lawyers, and abandoned children. His feast day is May 19. Poetically, he is referred to as “Advocate of the Poor.” Ivo could also be correlated with the Celtic “Ivo,” one of the ancient Celts sacred trees.

germanic
Unisex

Ichi

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Girl

Ichó

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “ēkhḗ (ἠχή) ēkhṓ (ἠχώ),” meaning “echo, sound, reflected sound, protracted sound.” Ekho was an Oread (a mountain nymph) who loved her voice. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and visited them on earth often. Eventually, Zeus’s wife, Hera, became suspicious and came from Mount Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs.

greek
Girl

Icia

This name derives from the Latin “Caecus / Caecilius,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Italic and Proto-Indo-European Adjective “*káykos / *kaikos,” meaning “one-eyed, blind.” Saint Cecilia was a noble lady of Rome who, with her husband Valerian, his brother Tiburtius, and a Roman soldier Maximus, suffered martyrdom ~230, under Emperor Alexander Severus. She was sentenced to death because she refused to worship the Roman gods. After attempts to suffocate her failed, she was beheaded. Her cult is predominant because Cecilia is the patron saint of music.

latin
Girl

Icik

This name derives from the Hebrew “Yiṣḥāq > Yitschâq,” Biblical Greek: Isaā́k (Ἰσαᾱ́κ), meaning “he laughs.” Isaac, son of Abraham by Sarah, his wife, and father of Jacob and Esau, was one of the three patriarchs in the Hebrew Bible, whose story is told in the book of Genesis. The name is derived from Judaism and is a given name among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim societies, generally in reference to the above.

hebrew
Boy

Iddo

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘iddô > Iddó̱,” meaning “his witness, I will praise him.” Iddo or Eido was a minor biblical prophet who appears to have lived during the reigns of King Solomon and his heirs, Rehoboam and Abijah, in the Kingdom of Judah.

hebrew
Boy

Idea

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “idéā (ἰδέᾱ),” meaning “look, appearance, form, type, sort, class, style,” which in turn derives from “eídō (εἴδω) eídomai (εἴδομαι)” meaning “to be seen, appear.” In philosophy, ideas are usually construed as mental representational images of some object. Ideas can also be abstract concepts that do not present as mental images. Many philosophers have considered ideas to be a fundamental ontological category of being.

greek
Girl

Ideo

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “idéā (ἰδέᾱ),” meaning “look, appearance, form, type, sort, class, style,” which in turn derives from “eídō (εἴδω) eídomai (εἴδομαι)” meaning “to be seen, appear.” In philosophy, ideas are usually construed as mental representational images of some object. Ideas can also be abstract concepts that do not present as mental images. Many philosophers have considered ideas to be a fundamental ontological category of being.

greek
Boy

Idia

The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Ancient Greek “eîdos (εἶδος) eídōlon (εἴδωλον),” meaning “phantom, shape, figure, image, the image of the mind, idea, fancy, representation, statue, an idol.” 2) From the Ancient Greek “ídios (ῐ̓́δῐος),” meaning “pertaining to self, that is, one’s own, separate, distinct, peculiar, specific, appropriate.”

greek
Girl

Idio

The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Ancient Greek “eîdos (εἶδος) eídōlon (εἴδωλον),” meaning “phantom, shape, figure, image, the image of the mind, idea, fancy, representation, statue, an idol.” 2) From the Ancient Greek “ídios (ῐ̓́δῐος),” meaning “pertaining to self, that is, one’s own, separate, distinct, peculiar, specific, appropriate.”

greek
Boy

Idra

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “húdōr (ῠ̔́δωρ) hudríā (ῠ̔δρῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “water, water jar.” 1) Hydria was a large ceramic or even bronze vase, formerly used in Greece and Italy, mainly to hold water in it or also to place votes in assemblies. 2) Idrija is a municipality in the Gorizia region of western Slovenia. The seat of the city is the town of Idrija. The city is located in the traditional province of the Slovenian Littoral and is in the Gorizia statistical region.

greek
Girl

Idun

This name derives from Old Norse name “Iðunnr,” composed of two elements: Old Norse prefix “ið” (again, very) plus the Proto-Norse “*unþi / unna” (wave/love). In Norse mythology, Iðunn is a goddess associated with apples and youth. Iðunn is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th-century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda, written in the 13th-century by Snorri Sturluson.

old norse
Girl

Idzi

This name comes from the Latin “Aegidius,” which means “tutelage, protection,” which in turn comes from the ancient Greek “aigís (αἰγῐ́ς).” Aegis was the name of the shield of Zeus, which was made of goatskin, in fact, Herodotus brings the name back to the term “aix” (genitive: aigos), meaning “goat.” The name changed several forms, and around the eleventh century was imported by the Normans into Britain as “Giles, Gyles.” Saint Giles (~650–710 AD), also known as Giles the Hermit, was a Greek, Christian, hermit saint from Athens, whose legend is centered in Provence and Septimania.

greek
Boy

Ieda

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

Girl

Iemi

This name derives from the Latin “Æmŭlus > Æmĭlĭus > Æmĭlĭānus,” meaning “imitating, rivaling.” The gens Aemilia, originally written Aimilia, was one of the most ancient patrician houses in Rome. The family was said to have originated in the reign of Numa Pompilius, the second King of Rome, and its members held the state’s highest offices from the early decades of the Republic to imperial times. Emily’s name has been used as a vernacular form of the Germanic “Amelia” up to the 19th-century. Used since the Middle Ages, it was popular in the 19th-century and is once again today. Saints Castus and Emilius († 250 AD) are venerated as saints and martyrs by the Catholic Church. Saint Cyprian and Augustine of Hippo praise them. When they were imprisoned, Castus and Emilius denied that they were Christians under torture and were released.

latin
Boy

Ieso

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iasō (Ἰασώ) Iēsō (Ἰησώ).” Iaso was the Greek goddess of recovery from illness. Asclepius’s daughter, she had five sisters: Aceso, Aglæa/Ægle, Hygieia, Panacea, and Meditrina (Roman). All six were associated with some aspect of health or healing. For more information on the genealogy of Iaso, see Panacea.

greek
Girl

Ieva

This name derives from the Hebrew “ḥawwah,” which is based on the Hebrew word “chavvâh,” meaning “to breathe or live, living.” The name has religious significance in the Judeo, Christian, Muslim tradition, after Eve’s use as the Biblical Adam’s female companion. Its use as a first name in England began in the 12th-Century. “Eva,” popular in many European countries, “Eve” used as an anglicized form of Gaelic Aoife “radiant, beautiful” in Scotland and Ireland and “Evie,” usually a familiar form, now also a given name.

hebrew
Girl

Ifan

It is a Christian baptismal name associated mainly with the Slavic languages. It is the Slavic variant of the names “Johanna” and “Joannes.” The name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn derives from the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan,” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations between males and females in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ifis

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Íphis (Ἶφις),” from “îphi (ἶφι) Ī́phidos (Ἴφιδος),” meaning “strong, might.” Iphis was a name attributed to eight individuals in Greek mythology. Some of them were: 1) According to the Roman poet Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Iphis (or Iphys) was the daughter of Telethusa and Ligdus in Crete. 2) One of the daughters of Thespius and Megamede. She bore Heracles a son, Celeustanor. 3) Daughter of Peneus, mother of Salmoneus by Aeolus, the son of Hellen.

greek
Girl

Igak

This name derives from the Native American (Eskimo-Aleut, Greenlandic) “Igak,” meaning “cooking pot, cooking utensil.”

native american (eskimo-aleut, greenlandic)
Girl

Igaq

This name derives from the Native American (Eskimo-Aleut, Greenlandic) “Igak,” meaning “cooking pot, cooking utensil.”

native american (eskimo-aleut, greenlandic)
Girl

Igea

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “hugíeia (ὑγίεια) Ygíeia (Ὑγιεία).” Hygieia, in Greek and Roman mythology, was the daughter of the god of medicine, Asclepius, and Epione. She was the goddess, personification of health, cleanliness, and sanitation. Hygieia also played an essential part in her father’s cult, Asclepius. While her father was more directly associated with healing, she was related to the prevention of sickness and the continuation of good health.

greek
Girl

Igeo

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “hugíeia (ὑγίεια) Ygíeia (Ὑγιεία).” Hygieia, in Greek and Roman mythology, was the daughter of the god of medicine, Asclepius, and Epione. She was the goddess, personification of health, cleanliness, and sanitation. Hygieia also played an essential part in her father’s cult, Asclepius. While her father was more directly associated with healing, she was related to the prevention of sickness and the continuation of good health.

greek
Boy

Iggi

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Iggy

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Igna

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Igon

mercy (An equivalent of the name Ascensión)

basque
Boy

Igor

This name derives from the Old Norse god “Yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwaz) plus “*harjaz” (army, army leader, commander, warrior). Yngvi “Proto-Germanic (Ingwaz)” is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr. Freyr is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (God of beauty and fertility).

germanic
Boy

Ihar

This name derives from the Old Norse god “Yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwaz) plus “*harjaz” (army, army leader, commander, warrior). Yngvi “Proto-Germanic (Ingwaz)” is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr. Freyr is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (God of beauty and fertility).

germanic
Boy

Ihna'

This name derives from the Etruscan, later from the Latin, “ignis > egnātĭus,” meaning “fiery one, fire, light, glow, radiance, rays of the sun.” 1) Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight from a local noble family, hermit, priest since 1537, and theologian, who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and was its first Superior General. 2) Ignatius of Antioch was among the Apostolic Fathers, was the third Bishop of Antioch, and was a student of John the Apostle.

etruscan
Boy

Ihor

This name derives from the Old Norse god “Yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwaz) plus “*harjaz” (army, army leader, commander, warrior). Yngvi “Proto-Germanic (Ingwaz)” is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr. Freyr is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (God of beauty and fertility).

germanic
Boy

Iida

this name derives from the Short form of obsolete names beginning with the Ancient Germanic element “īd” meaning "work", used for both sexes in medieval England. It was revived in the 19th century, partly mistaken for a Greek name, for the Mount Ida of classical mythology.

germanic
Girl

Iija

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” The Roman equivalent was “Pax.” Eirene in Greek Mythology was one of the Horae and the personification of peace. She is sometimes said to be the daughter of Zeus and Themis. Irene and its variants were also the names of an 8th-century Byzantine empress, as well as several saints. The name has always been trendy among the people of the Christian faith. In English, the name “Irene” did not become common until the 19th-century. In Greek mythology, the Horae (Greek: Ὧραι, ‘seasons’) were the goddesses of the seasons and the natural portions of time.

greek
Girl

Iiku

This name derives from the Old Norse god “Yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwaz) plus “*harjaz” (army, army leader, commander, warrior). Yngvi “Proto-Germanic (Ingwaz)” is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr. Freyr is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (God of beauty and fertility).

germanic
Boy

Iira

Iira is a variant form of Irene and Ira and a diminutive form of Ida. It is of Greek and Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (EIRĒNĒ) and (ADALHAID / ADALHAIDIS).

germanic
Girl

Iiri

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Îris (Ἶρις) Írídos (ίρίδος),” meaning “rainbow, goddess of the rainbow and divine messenger.” Iris is the personification of the rainbow and messenger of the gods. She is also known as one of the goddesses of the sea and the sky. Iris links the gods to humanity. She travels with the speed of wind from one end of the world to the other, and into the depths of the sea and the underworld.

greek
Girl

Iiro

Iiro is a diminutive of Ivar and Isak. It is of Old Norse and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (ÍVARR) and (YITZCHAQ).

hebrew
Boy

Ikar

Icarus is cognate with Etruscan Vikare. This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ī́karos (Ῑ̓́κᾰρος),” composed of two elements: “hḗkō (ἥκω)” (to have come, to be present, to have reached a point) plus “āḗr (ᾱ̓ήρ)” (mist, air, wind, space, volume). In turn, the name means “the one who reaches the sky.” Icarus is the son of the master craftsman Daedalus. The main story told about Icarus is his attempt to escape from Crete using wings that his father constructed from feathers and wax.

greek
Boy

Iker

It is a Basque given name, meaning “visitation.” The Spanish Basque writer Sabino Arana created Iker and Ikerne in his book Deun-Ixendegi Euzkotarra (Collection of Basque Saints’ Names), an effort to provide neologistic Basque versions of names instead of the traditional adaptations of Romance names.

basque literature
Boy

Ikke

Finnish name of unknown meaning. Transferred use of a surname, originally taken from the surname of the Finnish peasant rebellion leader Jaakko, which is a probably related to the Finnish form of Jakob.

finnish
Boy

Ikki

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Boy

Ikku

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Boy

Ikká

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Girl

Ikov

This name derives from the Late Latin “Iacobus,” from the Ancient Greek “Iákōbos (Ἰάκωβος),” meaning “supplanter, held by the heel, heel-grabber, leg-puller.” In turn, the name derives from the Hebrew root “ʿqb > Yaʿakov,” meaning “to follow, to be behind,” and it referred to the circumstances of Jacob’s birth when he held on to the heel (Hebrew: ʿaqeb) of his older twin brother Esau. As described in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob, the Talmud, the New Testament, the Koran, and the scriptures of Baha’i as the third patriarch of the Jewish people with whom God made a covenant and ancestor of the tribes of Israel, who took their names from his descendants. In the Hebrew Bible, Jacob is Isaac and Rebecca’s son, and grandson of Abraham, Sarah, and Bethuel. Jacob is honored as a prophet of Islam; in fact, the name is commonly used as a baptismal name in Arabic and Muslim societies.

hebrew
Boy

Ikue

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

japanese
Girl

Ilan

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘ı̂ylân,” meaning “tree, oak tree,” transliterated into Ancient Greek “déndron (δένδρον).” The name is of Jewish tradition and appears in the bible and the Old Testament. Elon is a rare male first name as it was not ranked for males of all ages in the United States census, 1990. It is also used in many countries in a feminine sense, as the girl’s name “Ilana.” Moreover, the Jewish holiday of Tu Bishvat, the “new year of the trees,” is referred to in Hebrew as “Rosh HaShanah La’Ilanot,” where “Ilanot” is the feminine plural Hebrew word for tree.

hebrew
Boy

Ilar

It is a given and family name, derived from the Latin “hilarious” (cheerful, merry) from the Ancient Greek “hilarós (ἱλαρός)” (cheerful, lively, joyous, glad, happy) which in turn comes from “hī́lāos (ῑ̔́λᾱος)” (propitious, gracious, merciful, kind, mild, gentle). Saint Hilarion was born in Tabatha, south of Gaza, in Syria Palaestina of pagan parents. He successfully studied rhetoric with a Grammarian in Alexandria. It seems that he was converted to Christianity in Alexandria. The name is taken from a character in Greek mythology, Ilaria, daughter of Leucippus, and the sister Phoebe. The variant foreign “Hilary” was particularly popular in France. During the Middle Ages, it was treated as a masculine name that was brought back into fashion in the twentieth century for women. The popularity of Hilary and its variant Hillary seems to be dropped from after Hillary Clinton became the First Lady of the United States.

greek
Boy

Ilda

This name derives from the Old Norse “Hildr” (Proto-Norse: *heldiō-), which in turn derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*hildiz,” meaning “battle, fight.” In Scandinavian language, Dutch and German, it is also the short form of any names beginning with “Hill-.” Other scholars describe this name as a short Germanic form of Hildegarde or similar names. Hilja, in the Finnish language, means “quiet, calm.”

germanic
Girl

Ilde

Ilde is a short form of Matilde, Batilde, and Clotilde. It is of Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (BATHILD) (MAHTHILDIS) and (CHLOTICHILDA).

germanic
Girl

Ildi

This name derives from the Old Norse “Hildr” (Proto-Norse: *heldiō-), which in turn derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*hildiz,” meaning “battle, fight.” In Scandinavian language, Dutch and German, it is also the short form of any names beginning with “Hill-.” Other scholars describe this name as a short Germanic form of Hildegarde or similar names. Hilja, in the Finnish language, means “quiet, calm.”

germanic
Girl

Ildó

This name derives from the Old Norse “Hildr” (Proto-Norse: *heldiō-), which in turn derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*hildiz,” meaning “battle, fight.” In Scandinavian language, Dutch and German, it is also the short form of any names beginning with “Hill-.” Other scholars describe this name as a short Germanic form of Hildegarde or similar names. Hilja, in the Finnish language, means “quiet, calm.”

germanic
Girl

Ilek

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ilen

This name initially was used as a surname, which is stemming from “Aveline,” a feminine Norman-French diminutive of the name “Ava” from “avila” (derived from the Germanic element “av / avi,” of unknown meaning, possibly “desired”). Evelyn is also sometimes used as an Anglicization of the Irish Gaelic Aibhilín and Éibhleann. Aibhilín is a variant form of Eibhlín, which is also derived from the Norman-French Aveline. Éibhleann, on the other hand, is said to be derived from the Old Irish “óiph,” meaning “radiance, beauty”; a variant of Éibhliu, used in English as Evilin. Other scholars support the theory that the name “Evelyn” means “hazelnut.” Teresa of Ávila (1515–1582) was a prominent Spanish mystic, Roman Catholic saint, Carmelite nun, an author of the Counter-Reformation, and theologian of contemplative life through mental prayer.

norman-french
Girl

Ilga

This name derives from the Old Norse “helgi > heilagr,” meaning “holy, blessed.” This name and its variants (Hege, Helle, Helge, Helga, and Helka) are a female name used mainly in Scandinavia, Iceland, Germany, and Hungary. The name was in use in England before the Norman Conquest but appeared to have died out afterward. It was re-introduced to English-speaking nations in the 20th-century from Germany and the Nordic countries. Eastern Slavic name Olga derives from it. The Scandinavian male equivalent is Helge or Helgi. The name day is celebrated: Estonia: May 31, Hungary: October 3, Latvia: August 11, Sweden: November 21, Finland: May 31, Greece: July 11.

old norse
Girl

Ilia

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ilie

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Iliu

The origin and meaning are debated, and several possible etymologies have been proposed. The name derives from the Provençal name "Aliénor," which became "Eléanor" or "Eleonore." Another suggested source may be the Germanic name "Aldenor," from "aenor," meaning "old north." The name may also be ultimately connected with the Arabic name "Nurah" (Arabic root: n-w-r > nur‎), meaning "light, luminous, radiant, brilliant." For several centuries, Provençal speakers lived in proximity to the Iberian Arabic-speaking "al-ʼAndalus," now Andalucía, and there is considerable evidence of cultural influences. 1) Eleanor of Aquitaine was one of the wealthiest and most powerful women in Western Europe during the high middle ages, a member of the Ramnufid dynasty of rulers in south-western France. 2) Eleanor of Provence (~1223–1291) was Queen consort of England as King Henry III of England's spouse, from 1236 until he died in 1272. She was considered a saint, although the Catholic Church has never officially announced his cult. 3) Eleanor of Castile († 1244) was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile and Eleanor of England.

french (provençal)
Girl

Ilja

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ilka

This name derives from the Ancient Greek: “Helenē (‘Ελενη) / Helénē (Ἑλένη),” meaning “torch, flambeau, brilliant, shining light, the bright one.” The name could be related to “Hḗlios (Ἥλιος),” the personification of the Sun in Greek mythology. In Greek mythology, Helen of Troy was the daughter of Zeus and wife of Menelaus, King of Sparta, and considered the most beautiful woman in the world. Early Christians widely used the name through Saint Helen, the mother of Emperor Constantine I, who, according to legend, found a piece of the cross of Jesus Christ during his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Hermione was the only child of King Menelaus of Sparta and his wife, Helen of Troy.

greek
Girl

Ilke

This name derives from the Ancient Greek: “Helenē (‘Ελενη) / Helénē (Ἑλένη),” meaning “torch, flambeau, brilliant, shining light, the bright one.” The name could be related to “Hḗlios (Ἥλιος),” the personification of the Sun in Greek mythology. In Greek mythology, Helen of Troy was the daughter of Zeus and wife of Menelaus, King of Sparta, and considered the most beautiful woman in the world. Early Christians widely used the name through Saint Helen, the mother of Emperor Constantine I, who, according to legend, found a piece of the cross of Jesus Christ during his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Hermione was the only child of King Menelaus of Sparta and his wife, Helen of Troy.

greek
Girl

Ilko

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ilma

This name derives from the Proto-Finnic “Ilma,” which means “air, space, time.” Adopted in the 19th-century as a first name, it represents the shortened from the name Ilmarinen, a skilled Kalevala blacksmith. Ilmarinen is a heroic blacksmith and made the dome of the sky, the Sampo, and various other magical devices in the Kalevala. Ilmarinen is a member of the group of heroes who steal the Sampo. Like Väinämöinen, he also has many stories told of his search for a wife, reaching the point where he forges one of gold.

finnish
Girl

Ilme

This name derives from the Proto-Finnic “Ilma,” which means “air, space, time.” Adopted in the 19th-century as a first name, it represents the shortened from the name Ilmarinen, a skilled Kalevala blacksmith. Ilmarinen is a heroic blacksmith and made the dome of the sky, the Sampo, and various other magical devices in the Kalevala. Ilmarinen is a member of the group of heroes who steal the Sampo. Like Väinämöinen, he also has many stories told of his search for a wife, reaching the point where he forges one of gold.

finnish
Girl

Ilmi

This name derives from the Proto-Finnic “Ilma,” which means “air, space, time.” Adopted in the 19th-century as a first name, it represents the shortened from the name Ilmarinen, a skilled Kalevala blacksmith. Ilmarinen is a heroic blacksmith and made the dome of the sky, the Sampo, and various other magical devices in the Kalevala. Ilmarinen is a member of the group of heroes who steal the Sampo. Like Väinämöinen, he also has many stories told of his search for a wife, reaching the point where he forges one of gold.

finnish
Girl

Ilmo

This name derives from the Proto-Finnic “Ilma,” which means “air, space, time.” Adopted in the 19th-century as a first name, it represents the shortened from the name Ilmarinen, a skilled Kalevala blacksmith. Ilmarinen is a heroic blacksmith and made the dome of the sky, the Sampo, and various other magical devices in the Kalevala. Ilmarinen is a member of the group of heroes who steal the Sampo. Like Väinämöinen, he also has many stories told of his search for a wife, reaching the point where he forges one of gold.

finnish
Boy

Ilon

This name derives from the Ancient Greek: “Helenē (‘Ελενη) / Helénē (Ἑλένη),” meaning “torch, flambeau, brilliant, shining light, the bright one.” The name could be related to “Hḗlios (Ἥλιος),” the personification of the Sun in Greek mythology. In Greek mythology, Helen of Troy was the daughter of Zeus and wife of Menelaus, King of Sparta, and considered the most beautiful woman in the world. Early Christians widely used the name through Saint Helen, the mother of Emperor Constantine I, who, according to legend, found a piece of the cross of Jesus Christ during his pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Hermione was the only child of King Menelaus of Sparta and his wife, Helen of Troy.

greek
Girl

Ilsa

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilse

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilsi

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilsy

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilva

This name derives from the Ligures (Ilvati) root “ilva > ilba > helba. According to literary tradition, in the prehistoric era, the island of Elba was inhabited by Ilvati, the population belongs to the Italian Liguria. The Ligures (Ilvati) were an ancient Indo-European people who gave their name to Liguria, a region of north-western Italy. They spoke the Old Ligurian language, which is generally believed to have been an Indo-European language (close to Celtic and Italic languages). Some scholars claim that the name is of Etruscan origin and meaning “iron.”

etruscan
Girl

Ilvo

This name derives from the Ligures (Ilvati) root “ilva > ilba > helba. According to literary tradition, in the prehistoric era, the island of Elba was inhabited by Ilvati, the population belongs to the Italian Liguria. The Ligures (Ilvati) were an ancient Indo-European people who gave their name to Liguria, a region of north-western Italy. They spoke the Old Ligurian language, which is generally believed to have been an Indo-European language (close to Celtic and Italic languages). Some scholars claim that the name is of Etruscan origin and meaning “iron.”

etruscan
Boy

Ilya

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Ilza

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Ilze

This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.

hebrew
Girl

Il’o

This name derives from the Hebrew “‘êlı̂yâh / ‘êlı̂yâhû > Eliyahu,” Ancient Greek “Hēlías (Ἡλίας),” meaning “my God is the lord.” Eliyahu was a famous prophet and a miracle worker in the northern kingdom of Israel during the reign of Ahab (9th-century BC), according to the Biblical Books of Kings, as well as the Qur’an. In Islam, the Qur’an describes Elijah as a great and righteous prophet of God and one who powerfully preached against the worship of Ba’al. In Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, he is known as “Elijah the Thunderer,” and in folklore, he is held responsible for summer storms, hail, rain, thunder, and dew.

hebrew
Boy

Iman

This name derives from the Arabic “īmān,” meaning “faith, belief, certitude to the unseen.” Iman in Islamic theology denotes a believer’s faith in the metaphysical aspects of Islam. Its most simple definition is the belief in the six articles of faith, known as arkān al-īmān. Princess Iman bint Abdullah (born 1996) is the second child and eldest daughter of King Abdullah II and Queen Rania of Jordan. 2) Princess Iman (born 1983) is King Hussein’s daughter and Queen Noor of Jordan. She has two brothers, Hamzah and Hashim, and a younger sister, Princess Raiyah. She is a half-sister to King Abdullah II of Jordan.

arabic
Girl

Imbi

This name derives from the Finnish word “impi,” meaning “virgin, maiden.” The feast day in Finland is traditionally celebrated on June 11.

finnish
Girl

Imbá

This name represents the variant form of Ilmari and the pet form of Immanuel and Ismael. It is of Finnish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (ILMA) (IMANU'ÉL) and (YISHMA'EL).

hebrew
Boy

Imen

This name derives from the Arabic “īmān,” meaning “faith, belief, certitude to the unseen.” Iman in Islamic theology denotes a believer’s faith in the metaphysical aspects of Islam. Its most simple definition is the belief in the six articles of faith, known as arkān al-īmān. Princess Iman bint Abdullah (born 1996) is the second child and eldest daughter of King Abdullah II and Queen Rania of Jordan. 2) Princess Iman (born 1983) is King Hussein’s daughter and Queen Noor of Jordan. She has two brothers, Hamzah and Hashim, and a younger sister, Princess Raiyah. She is a half-sister to King Abdullah II of Jordan.

arabic
Unisex

Imke

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Imma

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Immi

This name represents the variant form of Ilmari and the pet form of Immanuel and Ismael. It is of Finnish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (ILMA) (IMANU'ÉL) and (YISHMA'EL).

hebrew
Boy

Immo

This name represents the variant form of Ilmari and the pet form of Immanuel and Ismael. It is of Finnish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (ILMA) (IMANU'ÉL) and (YISHMA'EL).

hebrew
Boy

Immu

This name represents the variant form of Ilmari and the pet form of Immanuel and Ismael. It is of Finnish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (ILMA) (IMANU'ÉL) and (YISHMA'EL).

hebrew
Boy

Immy

This name is a variant form of Imma, Ilma, Impi, and Ingeborg’s pet form. This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde, from the Ancient Germanic “*ermunaz”, meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful”.

germanic
Girl

Impi

This name derives from the Finnish word “impi,” meaning “virgin, maiden.” The feast day in Finland is traditionally celebrated on June 11.

finnish
Girl

Imre

This name derives from the Old High German “Haimirich,” composed of two elements “*haimaz” (home, house) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). The name means “ruler of the home, sovereign of the homeland.” Harry, its English short form, was considered the “spoken form” of Henry in medieval England. Most English kings named Henry were called Harry. At one time, the name was so popular for English men that the phrase “Tom, Dick, and Harry” was used to refer to everyone. The most famous patron Henry II (Saint Henry), was Holy Roman Emperor from 1014 until he died in 1024. The last member of the Ottonian dynasty of Emperors, Henry II, succeeded to the German throne following his second-cousin Emperor Otto III’s sudden death in 1002. Henry was born on May 5, 972, the son of Duke Henry II, Duke of Bavaria, and Gisela of Burgundy.

germanic
Boy

Inah

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ínachos (Ἴναχος).” In Greek mythology, Inachus was the first king of Argos after whom a river was called Inachus River, the modern Panitsa that drains the western margin of the Argive plain. The historian Pausanias describes him as the eldest king of Argos, who named the river after himself and sacrificed to Hera.

greek
Boy

Inar

Inar is a Hittite god of woods and fields. There Tarhun sends Inar to look for sun god Istanu, but the ice devil Hahhima freezes Inar. Inar's tasks are similar to the tasks of the god of wild animals and hunting, Kurunta.

hittite-hurrian
Boy

Inas

This name derives from the Arabic “īnās,” meaning “friendliness, provide companionship.”

arabic
Girl

Inci

This name derives from the Turkish “Inci,” which in turn derives from the Old Turkic “yençü,” meaning “pearl.”

turkish
Girl

Indu

bright drop

sanskrit
Girl

Inek

This name derives from Latin name “Innocentius,” based on the word “innŏcens,” which in turn derives from Latin feminine noun” innŏcentĭa,” meaning “an honest man, a gentleman, an innocent.” Several popes used this name including, Pope Innocent I pope from 401 to 12 March 417. According to his biographer in the Liber Pontificalis, Innocent was a native of Albano and the son of a man called Innocentius, but his contemporary Jerome referred to him as the son of the previous pope, Anastasius I, probably a unique case of a son succeeding his father in the papacy. 2) Pope Innocent III (~1161–1216) reigned from 8 January 1198 to his death. His birth name was Lotario dei Conti di Segni, sometimes anglicized to Lothar of Segni.

latin
Boy

Ines

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “hagnós ‎(ἁγνός) agní ‎(αγνή),” meaning “pure, chaste, holy, sacred, purifying.” It was the name of a popular Christian saint, Saint Agnes of Rome, a fact which encouraged the extensive use of the name. Agnes was the third most popular name for women in the English speaking world for more than 400 years. Its medieval pronunciation was “Annis,” and its usage and many of its forms coincided with the equally popular English name Anne. 1) Agnes of Rome (~291–304) is a virgin-martyr venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, the Anglican Communion, and Lutheranism. She is one of seven women, who along with the Blessed Virgin, are commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass. She is the patron saint of chastity, gardeners, girls, engaged couples, rape victims, and virgins. 2) Agnes of Germany (1072–1143), also known as Agnes of Waiblingen, was a member of the Salian imperial family. Through her first marriage, she was a Duchess consort of Swabia; through her second marriage, she was a Margravine consort of Austria.

greek
Girl

Inez

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “hagnós ‎(ἁγνός) agní ‎(αγνή),” meaning “pure, chaste, holy, sacred, purifying.” It was the name of a popular Christian saint, Saint Agnes of Rome, a fact which encouraged the extensive use of the name. Agnes was the third most popular name for women in the English speaking world for more than 400 years. Its medieval pronunciation was “Annis,” and its usage and many of its forms coincided with the equally popular English name Anne. 1) Agnes of Rome (~291–304) is a virgin-martyr venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, the Anglican Communion, and Lutheranism. She is one of seven women, who along with the Blessed Virgin, are commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass. She is the patron saint of chastity, gardeners, girls, engaged couples, rape victims, and virgins. 2) Agnes of Germany (1072–1143), also known as Agnes of Waiblingen, was a member of the Salian imperial family. Through her first marriage, she was a Duchess consort of Swabia; through her second marriage, she was a Margravine consort of Austria.

greek
Girl

Inga

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Girl

Inge

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Unisex

Ingo

This name derives from the Old Norse God “Yngvi”, the form of the Germanic god’s name (*Ingwa / *Ingwi / *Ingu) plus “*berganą / *burgz” (to take care, to preserve, to protect, to save, to help, to rescue / fortification, stronghold, fortified city, castle). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god “Freyr,” one of the most important gods of old-Norse paganism, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility). 1) Ingebjørg Guttormsdatter (12th-century) was a medieval Norwegian Queen consort and spouse of King Eystein I of Norway (Øystein Magnusson). 2) Ingeborg of Denmark (1175–1236) was a French queen. She was a daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark and Sofia of Minsk, and wife of Philip II of France. 3) Princess Ingeborg Magnusdotter of Sweden, (1277–1319) was a Danish queen consort, daughter of King Magnus III of Sweden, and wife of King Eric VI of Denmark.

germanic
Boy

Inia

The Hindi word is a term pre-Islamic Persian origin and means literally “Indian,” composed of two elements: “Hind,” from the Sanskrit “Síndhu” plus the adjectival suffix “-ī.” The Persian pre-Islamic merchants and ambassadors used this term in northern India in respect of any Indian language. India is a feminine given name derived from the name of the country India, which takes its name from the Indus river. The name was used for India Wilkes, a character in the novel and movie “gone with the wind”. Its use for girls in England began during the British rule in India during the 19th-century.

sanskrit
Girl

Inie

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Girl

Inka

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Girl

Inke

It is the short form of names beginning with the element “ing-,” such as Ingrid, Ingeborg, Ingvild and Ingeberg. The name derives from the Old Norse God “yngvi,” the form of the Germanic god’s name (*ingwa / *ingwi / *ingu). Ingwi is an essential mythological Germanic figure which appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr, is one of the most important gods of Old-Norse paganism sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, (god of beauty and fertility), for this is a significant link between the two mythologies. The Inga people are an indigenous ethnic group from the southwest region of Colombia. They speak a dialect of Quechua known as Inga Kichwa.

germanic
Girl

Inko

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

Boy

Inna

Inna is a romanization of the modern Russian given name (Инна), supposedly meaning “strong water.” It was an early male Russian martyr but is currently used as a feminine name only. Inna was the fourth most popular name given to baby girls born in Moscow, Russia, in 2007. In ancient Greece, the name “Inna” (Инна) is also attested (probably from “Innin” (ἴννην), meaning ‘little girl’). However, a connection with the Russian Inna hasn’t been confirmed. In other Russian sources, Inna means “fountain, lively, and full of life.”

slavic
Girl

Inno

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

Boy

Inse

(NO RELIABLE INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE, WE WILL UPDATE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE).

Girl

Ints

This name derives from the Old High German “Haimirich,” composed of two elements “*haimaz” (home, house) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). The name means “ruler of the home, sovereign of the homeland.” Harry, its English short form, was considered the “spoken form” of Henry in medieval England. Most English kings named Henry were called Harry. At one time, the name was so popular for English men that the phrase “Tom, Dick, and Harry” was used to refer to everyone. The most famous patron Henry II (Saint Henry), was Holy Roman Emperor from 1014 until he died in 1024. The last member of the Ottonian dynasty of Emperors, Henry II, succeeded to the German throne following his second-cousin Emperor Otto III’s sudden death in 1002. Henry was born on May 5, 972, the son of Duke Henry II, Duke of Bavaria, and Gisela of Burgundy.

germanic
Boy

Inuk

This name derives from the native American (Eskimo-Aleut, Greenlandic) “Inuk (ᐃᓄᒃ),” from “Inuktitut (ᐃᓄᐃᑦ), meaning “human being, man, a person.” Inuk (plural: Inuit) refers to amember of one of the several indigenous peoples from the Arctic who descended from the Thule. The Thule or proto-Inuit were the ancestors of all modern Inuit. They developed in coastal Alaska by AD 1000 and expanded eastwards across Canada, reaching Greenland by the 13th century.

native american (eskimo-aleut, greenlandic)
Unisex

Inya

This name derives from Latin name “Innocentius,” based on the word “innŏcens,” which in turn derives from Latin feminine noun” innŏcentĭa,” meaning “an honest man, a gentleman, an innocent.” Several popes used this name including, Pope Innocent I pope from 401 to 12 March 417. According to his biographer in the Liber Pontificalis, Innocent was a native of Albano and the son of a man called Innocentius, but his contemporary Jerome referred to him as the son of the previous pope, Anastasius I, probably a unique case of a son succeeding his father in the papacy. 2) Pope Innocent III (~1161–1216) reigned from 8 January 1198 to his death. His birth name was Lotario dei Conti di Segni, sometimes anglicized to Lothar of Segni.

latin
Boy

Ioan

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Ioas

This name derives from the Hebrew name “yô'âsh,” meaning “Yahweh has given, given by the Lord.” In the Old Testament, this name was borne by several characters: 1) son of king Ahaziah and the 8th king of Judah. 2) son of king Jehoahaz and the 12th king of the northern kingdom of Israel. 3) father of Gideon. 4) a son of King Ahab. 5) a descendant of Shelah, the son of Judah, either the son of Shelah or the son of Jokim. 6) son of Shemaah of Gibeah, who resorted to David at Ziklag.

hebrew
Boy

Ioel

This name comes from the Hebrew “Yahweh > yôʾēl > yôʾēl > yoʾel,” which means “salvation, Yhwh is God.” Yoʾel is the name of a minor prophet in the Bible. The name is composed of the words “Yeho or Yah,” an abbreviation of Yhwh plus “El, El,” which means “God.” In turn, the name literally means “Yahweh is God.” It shares Elijah’s etymology, but this has the elements reversed, which should not be confused with Jael’s female name, instead of a different meaning.

hebrew
Boy

Iohn

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iola

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “íon (ίον) Iólē (Ῐ̓όλη),” meaning “violet, purple flower dark blue flower.” In Greek mythology, Iole was the daughter of Eurytus, king of the city Oechalia. Iole was indirectly the cause of Heracles’s death because of his wife’s jealousy of her.

greek
Girl

Iole

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “íon (ίον) Iólē (Ῐ̓όλη),” meaning “violet, purple flower dark blue flower.” In Greek mythology, Iole was the daughter of Eurytus, king of the city Oechalia. Iole was indirectly the cause of Heracles’s death because of his wife’s jealousy of her.

greek
Girl

Iolo

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “íon (ίον) Iólē (Ῐ̓όλη),” meaning “violet, purple flower dark blue flower.” In Greek mythology, Iole was the daughter of Eurytus, king of the city Oechalia. Iole was indirectly the cause of Heracles’s death because of his wife’s jealousy of her.

greek
Girl

Iona

This name derives from the Hebrew “Yônā,” Arabic “Yonah,” meaning “dove.” Jonah is a name given in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh, Old Testament) to a prophet of the northern kingdom of Israel in about the 8th-century BC, the eponymous central character in the Book of Jonah, famous for being swallowed by a fish or a whale, depending on the translation. The biblical story of Jonah is also repeated, with a few notable differences, in the Qur’an.

hebrew
Girl

Ione

This name derives from the Ancient Greek word “Íon (Ίον),” which means “purple” (the color and the flower’ violet flower’). According to Greek mythology, Ion was the illegitimate child of Creüsa, daughter of Erechtheus and wife of Xuthus. Ion was also believed to have founded the first tribe of Greece, the Ionians. He has often been identified with the Javan mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. In Greek mythology, “Ione” was one of the Nereids (Ancient Greek: Νηρηΐδες), sea nymphs (female spirits of sea waters), the fifty daughters of Nereus and Doris, sisters to Nerites.

greek
Unisex

Ionu

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Iōánnēs (Ἰωάννης),” which in turn, is a form of the Hebrew name “Yôchânân / Yehochanan” meaning “graced by Yahweh, God is gracious.” There are numerous forms of the name in different languages. This name is part of the most massive etymological root of names made up of more than five hundred variations among male and female in different languages. The name “John” had gained popularity among Jews in Judea and Galilee by the time the area became a province of the Roman Empire in 6 A.D. John Hyrcanus was the first king of the Hasmonean Dynasty and was the nephew of Judas Maccabeus. It was the given name of Yochanan ben Zechariah, a Jewish prophet known in English as John the Baptist.

hebrew
Boy

Iori

This name is of Celtic origin, composed of two Brythonic elements: the “Iôr” (lord, ruler) plus “werzh / gwerth / werth” (value, valuable, precious). In turn, the name means “the virtue of the Lord.”

welsh
Boy

Ipat

This name derives from the Ancient Greek Adjective “húpatos (ὕπᾰτος),” meaning “at the very top, lowest, furthest, highest, best, the supreme one, high, eminent,” from “meaning “hupó (ὑπό),” meaning “from underneath, under, beneath.” Hýpatos was a Byzantine court dignity, formerly the Greek translation of Latin consul, which reflects the office, but not the etymology of the Roman consul. The pride arose from the honorary consulships awarded in the late Roman Empire and survived until the early 12th-century. It was often conferred upon the rulers of the south Italian principalities. 1) Saint Hypatius – Hieromartyr; titular Bishop of Gangra, Asia Minor; present at the First Ecumenical Council where he supported Saint Athanasius the Great against the Arian heresy. 2) Saint Hypatius of Bithynia († ~450) was a monk and hermit of the fifth century. A Phrygian, he became a hermit at the age of nineteen in Thrace. 3) Hypatia was a Greek Neoplatonist philosopher in Roman Egypt who was the first historically noted woman in mathematics. As head of the Platonist school at Alexandria, she also taught philosophy and astronomy.

greek
Boy

Ipno

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “húpnos (ῠ̔ìπνος),” meaning “sleep.” In Greek mythology, Hypnos is the personification of sleep; the Roman equivalent is known as Somnus. His name is the origin of the word hypnosis.

greek
Boy

Ique

This name derives from the Old High German “Haimirich,” composed of two elements “*haimaz” (home, house) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). The name means “ruler of the home, sovereign of the homeland.” Harry, its English short form, was considered the “spoken form” of Henry in medieval England. Most English kings named Henry were called Harry. At one time, the name was so popular for English men that the phrase “Tom, Dick, and Harry” was used to refer to everyone. The most famous patron Henry II (Saint Henry), was Holy Roman Emperor from 1014 until he died in 1024. The last member of the Ottonian dynasty of Emperors, Henry II, succeeded to the German throne following his second-cousin Emperor Otto III’s sudden death in 1002. Henry was born on May 5, 972, the son of Duke Henry II, Duke of Bavaria, and Gisela of Burgundy.

germanic
Boy

Irek

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Eirēnáios (Εἰρηναῖος),” from “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” Saint Irenaeus was Bishop of Lugdunum in Gaul, then a part of the Roman Empire (now Lyons, France). He was an early church father and apologist, and his writings were formative in the early development of Christian theology. He was a hearer of Polycarp, who in turn was a disciple of John the Evangelist.

greek
Boy

Ires

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Îris (Ἶρις) Írídos (ίρίδος),” meaning “rainbow, goddess of the rainbow and divine messenger.” Iris is the personification of the rainbow and messenger of the gods. She is also known as one of the goddesses of the sea and the sky. Iris links the gods to humanity. She travels with the speed of wind from one end of the world to the other, and into the depths of the sea and the underworld.

greek
Girl

Iria

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” The Roman equivalent was “Pax.” Eirene in Greek Mythology was one of the Horae and the personification of peace. She is sometimes said to be the daughter of Zeus and Themis. Irene and its variants were also the names of an 8th-century Byzantine empress, as well as several saints. The name has always been trendy among the people of the Christian faith. In English, the name “Irene” did not become common until the 19th-century. In Greek mythology, the Horae (Greek: Ὧραι, ‘seasons’) were the goddesses of the seasons and the natural portions of time.

greek
Girl

Iris

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Îris (Ἶρις) Írídos (ίρίδος),” meaning “rainbow, goddess of the rainbow and divine messenger.” Iris is the personification of the rainbow and messenger of the gods. She is also known as one of the goddesses of the sea and the sky. Iris links the gods to humanity. She travels with the speed of wind from one end of the world to the other, and into the depths of the sea and the underworld.

greek
Girl

Irja

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” The Roman equivalent was “Pax.” Eirene in Greek Mythology was one of the Horae and the personification of peace. She is sometimes said to be the daughter of Zeus and Themis. Irene and its variants were also the names of an 8th-century Byzantine empress, as well as several saints. The name has always been trendy among the people of the Christian faith. In English, the name “Irene” did not become common until the 19th-century. In Greek mythology, the Horae (Greek: Ὧραι, ‘seasons’) were the goddesses of the seasons and the natural portions of time.

greek
Girl

Irka

This name derives from the Ancient Greek “eiríni (ειρήνη) eirḗnē ‎(εἰρήνη),” meaning “peace, tranquility, harmony.” The Roman equivalent was “Pax.” Eirene in Greek Mythology was one of the Horae and the personification of peace. She is sometimes said to be the daughter of Zeus and Themis. Irene and its variants were also the names of an 8th-century Byzantine empress, as well as several saints. The name has always been trendy among the people of the Christian faith. In English, the name “Irene” did not become common until the 19th-century. In Greek mythology, the Horae (Greek: Ὧραι, ‘seasons’) were the goddesses of the seasons and the natural portions of time.

greek
Girl

Irla

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Irma

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Irme

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Irmi

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Girl

Irmo

This name derives from the Germanic root “*ermunaz > irmin / ermen,” meaning “strong, whole, tall, exalted, whole, great, powerful.” This name also is the abbreviated form of names beginning with the element “Irm-,” for example, Irmine, Irmina, Irmela, Irmgard, Irmgardis, Irmentraud, Irmhild, and Irmhilde. Irmina of Oeren or Irmina of Trier († 704 / 710) was the wife of Hugobert, seneschal, and Count palatine, a leading person of the Hugobertine noble family. While during the High Middle Ages, she was believed to be the daughter of King Dagobert II, her parents are actually unknown. Today it is assumed that she came from a powerful Austrasian noble family, strongly connected to the Carolingian dynasty.

germanic
Boy

Popular Origins for I Names

About Names Starting with I

The letter I begins 200 beautiful baby names from diverse cultures and traditions. Whether you're drawn to classic I names with historical significance or modern I names with contemporary appeal, this collection offers something for every family.

Popular I names span many origins, from hebrew to greek traditions. Browse 200 boy names and 200 girl names starting with I, each with authentic meanings and cultural context.

Choosing a Name Starting with I

Names beginning with I offer a wide range of sounds, from soft and gentle to strong and powerful. Consider the meaning, origin, and how the name sounds with your last name when making your choice. Many I names carry deep cultural significance and timeless appeal.