Browse 35,200 beautiful baby girl names with meanings and origins. Discover the perfect girl name for your baby from cultures around the world.
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Hērákleia (Ἡράκλεια),” composed of two elements: “Hḗrā (Ἥρᾱ)” (Hera, the planet Venus) plus “kléos (κλέος)” (rumor, report, good report, fame, glory). In turn, the name means “glory of Hera.” Hēraklēs was the protector of men demigod hero in Greek mythology, son of Zeus and Alcmene, foster son of Amphitryon and great-grandson (and half-brother) of Perseus. He was the greatest of the Greek heroes, a paragon of masculinity, the ancestor of royal clans who claimed to be Heracleídae (Ἡρακλεῖδαι) and a champion of the Olympian order against chthonic monsters.
This name derives from the Germanic root “*auþa / *ôþela > ōt > uod / audo” (property, inheritance, heritage, recent form “wealth, fortune“). Audo and Odo” were originally diminutives of all names beginning with the element “od-, ot-.” Saint Otto of Bamberg, a Medieval German bishop, and missionary who, as papal legate, converted much of Pomerania to Christianity.
This name derives from the French “Hugues,” which in turn derives from an Old Low Franconian given name based on the Ancient Germanic element “*hugiz,” meaning “mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding.” The name became widespread in England after the conquest by the Normans. Hugues Capet (Hugh the Great) was the first “King of the Franks” from the eponymous Capetian dynasty, from his election to succeed the Carolingian Louis V in 987 until his death. Hugh of Lincoln (St. Hugh of Avalon), was, at the time of the Reformation, the best-known English saint after Thomas Becket.
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This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
Second-born
flax, tranquility (Uma (goddess) is the name of a Hindu goddess (Parvati) and also means "Mother" or "Lady of the Mountains". The name also means "tranquility" in Sanskrit and "bright" in Hindi/Sanskrit).
This name derives from the Old Norse “*UnR > una,” meaning “to enjoy, be happy with, be content,” and also represents a short form of the Finnish name “Unelma.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name derives from the Middle Egyptian “SŠN” and then after from the Persian root “Sousan, Susan.” However, the Hebrew root for the name of the lily (from Lilium family) derives from “Šōšannā > Shôshan > Shôshannâh,” which means “lotus, lily, to be joyful, bright, or cheerful.” It was first reported on an 11th Dynasty sarcophagus dating from approximately 2000 B.C. The Persian name for lily is “Soussan.” The name of Susa, an ancient city of Persia, may be derived from the lilies which abounded in the plain in which it was situated. It is the name of at least two women in the Bible.
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name derives from the Old Irish “úan” (Welsh: oen), meaning “lamb.” This name is a Celtic feminine given name.
This name derives from Old Norse “Þórfríðr,” composed of two elements: “Þórr” (thunder, Thor) plus “fríðr” (beautiful, nutritious, to make beautiful, lovely, beloved). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding God associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of humankind, and also hallowing, healing, and fertility. The cognate deity in more extensive Germanic mythology and paganism was known in Old English as Þunor and in Old High German as Donar (Runic: Þonar), stemming from a common Germanic “*þunraz,” meaning “thunder.”
This name derives from Old Norse “Þórfríðr,” composed of two elements: “Þórr” (thunder, Thor) plus “fríðr” (beautiful, nutritious, to make beautiful, lovely, beloved). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding God associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of humankind, and also hallowing, healing, and fertility. The cognate deity in more extensive Germanic mythology and paganism was known in Old English as Þunor and in Old High German as Donar (Runic: Þonar), stemming from a common Germanic “*þunraz,” meaning “thunder.”
This name of Norse origin has different branches 1) Modern form of the Old Norse and Icelandic name “Þúfa,” meaning “mound, knoll.” 2) From the Swedish “tuva,” meaning “tussock, a tuft of grass.” 3) Pet form of names containing the first element “þor” (Þórr, Thor), and the last element beginning with “f-” or with “v-/w-.”
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
This name derives from the Late Latin “urbānus,” meaning “citizen, a resident of the city, city-dweller.” The name was used for eight popes, a figure with this name is also mentioned in the letter of St. Paul to the Romans. Urban II was Pope from 12 March 1088 until his death on 29 July 1099. He is best known for initiating the First Crusade (1096–1099) and setting up the modern-day Roman Curia in the manner of a royal court to help run the Church.
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name is of Old Norse origin, composed of two elements: “oddr / oddi” (point, sharp point, peak, front ‘of an army’, point ‘of a weapon’, spear) plus “víg / vígr / viga” (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). In turn, the name means “the one who fights in the front line.”
This name derives from the Old Norse name “úlfr,” from the Ancient Germanic element “*-wulfaz,” meaning “wolf.” Wulf and Wolf were one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic and Nordic names. It could figure as the first element in dithematic names, as in Wulfstan, but mostly as the second element, “-ulf, / -olf.” The numerous names ending in -wulf, -ulf, -olf gave rise to hypocorisms (pet) from an early time, which was later also treated as given names in their own right. The wolf is a significant figure in Germanic and Norse paganism for more than a thousand years.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name is a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, and Hulda. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
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.
This name is a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, and Hulda. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
This name derives from the Old Norse name “úlfr,” from the Ancient Germanic element “*-wulfaz,” meaning “wolf.” Wulf and Wolf were one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic and Nordic names. It could figure as the first element in dithematic names, as in Wulfstan, but mostly as the second element, “-ulf, / -olf.” The numerous names ending in -wulf, -ulf, -olf gave rise to hypocorisms (pet) from an early time, which was later also treated as given names in their own right. The wolf is a significant figure in Germanic and Norse paganism for more than a thousand years.
flax, tranquility
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek name “Dōrothéa (Δωροθέα),” composed of two elements: “dôron (δῶρον)” (gift) plus “theós (θεός)” (divine, a deity, a god, God). In turn, the name means “given to God, the gift of God.” Dorothea was the name of two early saints, notably the 4th-century martyr Dorothea of Caesarea. Dorothy was a less common variant of Dorothea until it became one of the most popular girl’s names in the United States between 1904 and 1940. It was used by parents who had waited a long time for a child. The name Theodore derives from the same Greek root, in reverse order.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
Morning, Dawn, Sun rise, beginning of life. Usha is also one of the names of Goddess Shakti, in Indian culture and mythology.
This name derives from the Basque “uxue,” meaning “pigeon, dove.” Ujué (Uxue in Basque) is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain. According to legend, the town was founded when a shepherd saw a dove entering a hole in the rocks; peering inside, he found an image of the Virgin Mary.
This name derives from the Basque “uxue,” meaning “pigeon, dove.” Ujué (Uxue in Basque) is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain. According to legend, the town was founded when a shepherd saw a dove entering a hole in the rocks; peering inside, he found an image of the Virgin Mary.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Eugénios (Εὐγένῐος),” composed of two elements: “eû (εὖ)” (well) plus “gen- (γεν-) gígnomai (γίγνομαι)” (to come into being, to be born, to become). In turn, the name means “well-born, well come.” The name was not very common in Western Europe during the middle ages, and its use was intensified later thanks to the fame of Prince Eugene of Savoy. Prince Eugene of Savoy was one of the most successful military commanders in modern European history, rising to the highest state offices at the Imperial court in Vienna. Born in Paris, Eugene grew up around the French court of King Louis XIV. Blessed Eugenia Smet (1825–1871) founded the Holy Souls’ Helpers’ Society in 1856. Her feast day is 7 February. Pope Eugenius I († 657), also known as Eugene I, was Pope from 10 August 654 to his death in 657 and was originally from Rome.
supreme, greatest
This name derives from the Turkish “ülke”, meaning “country, nation”.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
This name derives from the Latin “lūx > lūcis > lucere (lūcĕo) > lūcĭus,” meaning “light, shine, clear, bright, shining, full of light,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Italic “*louks,” meaning “white, light, bright,” compared to the Ancient Greek “leukós (λευκός).” Throughout Roman history, Lucius was the most common praenomen, used slightly more than Gaius, and somewhat more than Marcus. The name survived the collapse of the Western Empire in the 5th-century and had continued into modern times. Saint Lucian of Antioch, known as Lucian, the martyr, was a Christian presbyter, theologian, and martyr. He was noted for both his scholarship and ascetic piety. 1) Lucius Licinius Lucullus (118–57/56 BC) was an optimate politician of the late Roman Republic, closely connected with Lucius Cornelius Sulla. 2) Lucia Visconti (1372–1424) was the daughter of Bernabò Visconti, Lord of Milan, and Beatrice Regina della Scala. She was one of seventeen legitimate children. 3) Lúcia de Jesus dos Santos (1907–2005), also known as Lúcia of Fátima and by her religious name Sister Maria Lúcia of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart, was a Portuguese Catholic Carmelite nun and one of the three children to witness the 1917 Marian apparitions in Fátima.
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은하).
It is a Korean female given name. It was the third-most-popular name for baby girls born in South Korea in 1990. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은지). This name increases its popularity thanks to “Jung Eun-Ji” (born 1993), South Korean singer, dancer, actress, and member of the South Korean girl group (A Pink).
It is a Korean feminine given name. It was the sixth-most popular name for baby girls born in South Korea in 1970. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은주).
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은서).
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This name derives from the Basque “uda,” literally meaning "summer."
This name derives from the Basque “uda,” literally meaning "summer."
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name derives from the Germanic root “*auþa / *ôþela > ōt > uod / audo” (property, inheritance, heritage, recent form “wealth, fortune“). Audo and Odo” were originally diminutives of all names beginning with the element “od-, ot-.” Saint Otto of Bamberg, a Medieval German bishop, and missionary who, as papal legate, converted much of Pomerania to Christianity.
This name means “will, desire” in African (Ibibio) language.
Il nome è un diminutivo per Gwendolyn e Gwendolen. È stato utilizzato anche come cognome in Gran Bretagna almeno dal 17° secolo. Tuttavia, la sua popolarità come nome femminile è attribuito al personaggio Wendy Darling del 1904 universo di Peter Pan e il suo romanzo del 1911 Peter and Wendy di J. M. Barrie. He took it from the nickname “Fwendy-Wendy,” meaning “friend.” Gwendolen e Gwendolyn derivano dal proto-celtico e gallese “*uindo- / gwyn dolen,” che significa “anello benedetto, anello bianco, che ha ciglia bianche”. Saint Gwen Teirbron (in francese: Blanche; in latino: Alba Trimammis o Candida; forse in inglese: Wite) era una santa bretone e moglie di Saint Fragan, che si suppone abbia vissuto nel VI secolo.
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This name derives from the Old Norse name “úlfr,” from the Ancient Germanic element “*-wulfaz,” meaning “wolf.” Wulf and Wolf were one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic and Nordic names. It could figure as the first element in dithematic names, as in Wulfstan, but mostly as the second element, “-ulf, / -olf.” The numerous names ending in -wulf, -ulf, -olf gave rise to hypocorisms (pet) from an early time, which was later also treated as given names in their own right. The wolf is a significant figure in Germanic and Norse paganism for more than a thousand years.
This name derives from the Slavic “Ulita (Улита),” meaning “snail, shell.” The gastropod shell is a shell that is part of the body of a gastropod or snail, one kind of mollusk. The name originated as a nickname for a sluggish person. Ulita is also a river in the Russian region of Murmansk.
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Germanic “Alfher” (from which Alvaro) or the Old Norse “Áleifr” from the Proto-Norse “*AnulaiƀaR” (from which Olaf). 2) From the Latin “ŏlīva” (olive, a symbol of peace, religious piety, or victory), referring to the fruit or the branch of the olive. 3) A third hypothesis, less accredited, is from the Mycenaean Greek “élaiwon (ἔλαιϝον),” Ancient Greek “élaion (ἔλαιον).” The names “Olaf” and “Oliver” are linked to the Latin root, but related to the Germanic and Norse, from (Alfher) and (Ólæifr). Saint Oliver Plunkett (1629–1681) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of Armagh and chief bishop of all of Ireland, who was the last victim of the papist plot.
This name is a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, and Hulda. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
This name is a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, and Hulda. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: from the Latin “Ulpianus.” It is a name of ethnic origin from “Ulpius” an ancient city. 1) Ulpian (Domitius Ulpianus) († 228) was a Roman jurist and imperial official whose writings supplied one-third of the total content of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I’s monumental Digest, or Pandects (completed 533). 2) Trajan (Marcus Ulpius Nerva Traianus); 53–117 AD) was Roman emperor from 98 AD until his death in 117 AD. 3) Ulpia Marciana was the beloved elder sister of Roman Emperor Trajan. She was the eldest child born to Roman woman Marcia and the Spanish Roman senator Marcus Ulpius Traianus.
This name derives from the Latin “Umbri,” meaning “relating to Umbria or its inhabitants or extinct language.” The Umbri were an Italic tribe of ancient Italy. A region called Umbria still exists and is now occupied by Italian speakers. It is somewhat smaller than the ancient Umbria. Cornelius Bocchus wrote that they descended from an ancient Gaulish tribe. Plutarch wrote that the name might be a different way of writing the name of the Celto-Germanic tribe Ambrones, which loosely means “King of the Boii.
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plum > child
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Euníke (Ευνίκη),” composed of two elements: “eû (εὖ)” (well) plus “nī́kē (νῑ́κη)” (victory, success). In turn, the name means “good victory.” The name appears in the Bible, where it is brought by the mother of Saint Timothy (in the same letter is also the name of Lois, his grandmother). As an English name, its use began after the Protestant Reformation.
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은숙).
This name derives from the Spanish “urraca,” meaning “magpie.” Early medieval documents show that the name originates from the Basque-Navarrese region, which makes a Basque origin probable, in this perspective, the name is sometimes traced back to the Basque word “urra” meaning “hazel or kernel.” At the same time, other sources propose an onomatopoeic origin. Urraca (1079–1126) was Queen of León, Castile, and Galicia from 1109 until her death in childbirth. She claimed the imperial title as Empress of All Spain and Empress of All Galicia.
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The origin of this name is still quite uncertain today. The theories include: 1) The most likely hypothesis is that the name starts with the Welsh “aur,” meaning “gold.” About the second element, there is not enough information to suggest a hypothesis. Saint Erfyl was a Holy Virgin in the British Isles, founded the church of Llanerfyl, Montgomeryshire, Wales. No reliable information has survived. Records of the feast day of the virgin Saint Erfyl first appear in Wales during the 15th-century, recorded as July 6.
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This name derives from the Basque “urki,” meaning “birch tree.”
This name derives from the Latin “Aurum > Aurĕus > Aurēlĭus,” which was the name of an ancient noble Roman family, “the Gens Aurelia.” In turn, the name derives from the Proto-Italic “*auso- / *auzom,” meaning “gold, golden, gilded, gold-colored, beautiful, precious, excellent, magnificent, (in some cases, the meaning is understood as ‘shining, beautiful’). The gens Aurelia was a plebeian family at Rome. The first member of the gens who obtained the consulship was Gaius Aurelius Cotta in 252 BC. From that time, the Aurelii become distinguished in history down to the end of the Republic. The nomen Aurelius is usually connected with the Latin adjective “Aurĕus,” meaning “golden,” and may have referred to the color of a person’s hair.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Basque “urtza,” meaning “marsh, melting, liquefy.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
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This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
This name derives from the Middle Egyptian “SŠN” and then after from the Persian root “Sousan, Susan.” However, the Hebrew root for the name of the lily (from Lilium family) derives from “Šōšannā > Shôshan > Shôshannâh,” which means “lotus, lily, to be joyful, bright, or cheerful.” It was first reported on an 11th Dynasty sarcophagus dating from approximately 2000 B.C. The Persian name for lily is “Soussan.” The name of Susa, an ancient city of Persia, may be derived from the lilies which abounded in the plain in which it was situated. It is the name of at least two women in the Bible.
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This name represents the short form of names ending with “-olin, -ólín, -olina, -ólína, -oline” and the female form of “Ole,” Old Norse variant form, Old Swedish and Danish and Norwegian younger form of “Óli.” In turn, is the pet form of Ólafr and Ólafur, from the Old Norse “anu *laiƀaR > læfan > ÓlæifR > Ólafr,” meaning “to shine, gleam, elf, supernatural being, a descendant of ancestors, relic of the ancestors, legacy of ancestors.”
roe, female deer
This name derives from Old Norse “Þórfríðr,” composed of two elements: “Þórr” (thunder, Thor) plus “fríðr” (beautiful, nutritious, to make beautiful, lovely, beloved). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding God associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of humankind, and also hallowing, healing, and fertility. The cognate deity in more extensive Germanic mythology and paganism was known in Old English as Þunor and in Old High German as Donar (Runic: Þonar), stemming from a common Germanic “*þunraz,” meaning “thunder.”
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은진).
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) plus “*balðraz” (power, strength, brave, bold, able-bodied). The name means “bold spirit.” Ubald of Gubbio (~1084–1160) was a medieval bishop of Gubbio, in Umbria, today venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Saint Ubaldo Day is still celebrated at the Basilica of Sant’Ubaldo in Gubbio in his honor, as well as at Jessup, Pennsylvania.
This name derives from the Ancient Egyptian “bȝstt,” meaning “she of the ointment jar.” Bastet is the name commonly used by scholars today to refer to a feline goddess of ancient Egyptian religion who was worshipped at least since the second dynasty. From the third millennium BC, when Bastet begins to appear in our record, she is depicted as either a fierce lioness or a woman with the head of a lion. Images of Bast were created from a local stone, named alabaster today.
This name derives from the Late Latin “urbānus,” meaning “citizen, a resident of the city, city-dweller.” The name was used for eight popes, a figure with this name is also mentioned in the letter of St. Paul to the Romans. Urban II was Pope from 12 March 1088 until his death on 29 July 1099. He is best known for initiating the First Crusade (1096–1099) and setting up the modern-day Roman Curia in the manner of a royal court to help run the Church.
This name derives from the Old High German name “Hugiberht,” composed of “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) and “*berhtaz” (light, brilliant, clear, shining one). In turn, the name means “a big heart, bright spirit, shining spirit.” Saint Hubertus or Hubert was the first Bishop of Liège. He was a Christian saint who was the patron saint of hunters, mathematicians, opticians, and metalworkers. Saint Hubertus was widely venerated during the Middle Ages. The iconography of his legend is entangled with the legend of Saint Eustace.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Oddbjǫrg,” composed of two elements: “oddr / oddi” (point, sharp point, peak, front ‘of an army,’ point ‘of a weapon,’ spear) plus “bjarga / borg” (to take care, to preserve, to protect, to save, to help, to rescue) or “borg” (fortification, stronghold, fortified city, castle). In turn, the name means “the one who helps someone in the frontline, the first line of defense of the castle.”
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
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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.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Eulalía (Ευλαλία),” composed of two elements: “eû (εὖ)” (well) plus “laléō (λᾰλέω)” (talk, chat, chatter, prattle, speak, chirp). In turn, the name means “to talk well.” Saint Eulalia was a co-patron saint of Barcelona, was a 13-year-old Roman Christian virgin who suffered martyrdom in Barcelona during the persecution of Christians in the reign of Emperor Diocletian. There is some dispute as to whether she is the same person as Saint Eulalia of Mérida, whose story is similar. Eulalia of Mérida was a young Roman Christian martyred in Emerita, the capital of Lusitania (modern Mérida in Spain), conventionally during the persecution under Diocletian and Maximian.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*hildiz” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “wolf fighter.”
This name derives from the Germanic and Old Norse “Ulfrún,” composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*rūnō” (secret, secret lore, secret knowledge, magic). In turn, the name means “the wolf's secrets.”
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) It seems to be a name of ideological inspiration. It represents the resumption of Lenin’s surname “Ul’yanov (Ульянов)” from “Ulʹjan (Ульян)” an old version of Julian, In fact, it may be used as a pet form of various names, for example, Giuliano. It is mainly concentrated in Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany.
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Germanic “Alfher” (from which Alvaro) or the Old Norse “Áleifr” from the Proto-Norse “*AnulaiƀaR” (from which Olaf). 2) From the Latin “ŏlīva” (olive, a symbol of peace, religious piety, or victory), referring to the fruit or the branch of the olive. 3) A third hypothesis, less accredited, is from the Mycenaean Greek “élaiwon (ἔλαιϝον),” Ancient Greek “élaion (ἔλαιον).” The names “Olaf” and “Oliver” are linked to the Latin root, but related to the Germanic and Norse, from (Alfher) and (Ólæifr). Saint Oliver Plunkett (1629–1681) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of Armagh and chief bishop of all of Ireland, who was the last victim of the papist plot.
This name derives from the Slavic “Ulita (Улита),” meaning “snail, shell.” The gastropod shell is a shell that is part of the body of a gastropod or snail, one kind of mollusk. The name originated as a nickname for a sluggish person. Ulita is also a river in the Russian region of Murmansk.
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.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Latin “ultĭmus,” meaning “finally, the oldest, the most remote, supreme, highest, ultimate, the highest.” The Medieval Latin meaning is “last one, the purpose of not having any more children.” The name-day is celebrated on November 1, the Feast of All Saints.
This name derives from the Old High German “Chlodowich and Chlodovech,” composed of two elements: “*hlūdaz,” meaning (to hear, loud, sound, noise / famous) and “wīg,” meaning (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). The name means “glorious in the battle, famous warrior.” 1) Saint Louise de Marillac was the co-founder, with St. Vincent de Paul, of the Daughters of Charity. She is venerated as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. 2) The Blessed Louise of Savoy (1461–1503) was a member of the French royal family, who gave up a life of privilege and comfort to become a Poor Clare nun. The Roman Catholic Church has beatified her.
This name derives from the Turkish “ulvi,” meaning “exalted, high,” which in turn derives from the Arabic “ʿulwiyy,” meaning “upper, high, lofty, overhead, sublime, exalted.”
This name derives from the Germanic and Old Norse “Ulfrún,” composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*rūnō” (secret, secret lore, secret knowledge, magic). In turn, the name means “the wolf's secrets.”
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.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “odýssomai (ὀδύσσομαι) Odysséus (Ὀδυσσεύς),” meaning “to be wroth against, hate, full of anger, wrathful.” Odysseus, also known by the Roman name Ulysses, was the perhaps fictional Greek King of Ithaca and the hero of Homer’s epic poem the Odyssey. Odysseus was the husband of Penelope, father of Telemachus, and son of Laërtes and Anticlea. He is most famous for the ten eventful years he took to return home after the decade-long Trojan War and his renowned Trojan horse ploy to capture the city of Troy.
This name derives from the Latin “Umbri,” meaning “relating to Umbria or its inhabitants or extinct language.” The Umbri were an Italic tribe of ancient Italy. A region called Umbria still exists and is now occupied by Italian speakers. It is somewhat smaller than the ancient Umbria. Cornelius Bocchus wrote that they descended from an ancient Gaulish tribe. Plutarch wrote that the name might be a different way of writing the name of the Celto-Germanic tribe Ambrones, which loosely means “King of the Boii.
This name derives from the Latin “unda,” meaning “a wave, crowd, multitude.” Undines, also called Ondines, are elementals, enumerated as the water elementals in works of alchemy by Paracelsus. They also appear in European folklore as fairy-like creatures; the name may be used interchangeably with those of other water spirits. According to a theory advanced by Paracelsus, an Undine is a water nymph or water spirit, the elemental of water.
This name derives from the Latin “unda,” meaning “a wave, crowd, multitude.” Undines, also called Ondines, are elementals, enumerated as the water elementals in works of alchemy by Paracelsus. They also appear in European folklore as fairy-like creatures; the name may be used interchangeably with those of other water spirits. According to a theory advanced by Paracelsus, an Undine is a water nymph or water spirit, the elemental of water.
This name derives from the Latin “ūnus -icus > ūnicus,” meaning “only, sole, single, unique, uncommon.”
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Late Latin “urbānus,” meaning “citizen, a resident of the city, city-dweller.” The name was used for eight popes, a figure with this name is also mentioned in the letter of St. Paul to the Romans. Urban II was Pope from 12 March 1088 until his death on 29 July 1099. He is best known for initiating the First Crusade (1096–1099) and setting up the modern-day Roman Curia in the manner of a royal court to help run the Church.
This name derives from the Basque “urdien,” meaning “blue.”
Father's pride
Urmilā means “Enchantress” and she is one of the major characters in the Hindu epic Ramayana. She was the daughter of King Janaka of Mithila and Queen Sunayana and the younger sister of Sita. She was the wife of Lakshmana with whom she had two sons, Angad and Chitraketu.
This name derives from the Spanish “urraca,” meaning “magpie.” Early medieval documents show that the name originates from the Basque-Navarrese region, which makes a Basque origin probable, in this perspective, the name is sometimes traced back to the Basque word “urra” meaning “hazel or kernel.” At the same time, other sources propose an onomatopoeic origin. Urraca (1079–1126) was Queen of León, Castile, and Galicia from 1109 until her death in childbirth. She claimed the imperial title as Empress of All Spain and Empress of All Galicia.
This name derives from the Spanish “urraca,” meaning “magpie.” Early medieval documents show that the name originates from the Basque-Navarrese region, which makes a Basque origin probable, in this perspective, the name is sometimes traced back to the Basque word “urra” meaning “hazel or kernel.” At the same time, other sources propose an onomatopoeic origin. Urraca (1079–1126) was Queen of León, Castile, and Galicia from 1109 until her death in childbirth. She claimed the imperial title as Empress of All Spain and Empress of All Galicia.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Old Church Slavonic “sladŭkŭ (сладъкъ),” meaning “delight, sweet, sugary.”
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This name derives from Old Norse “Þórfríðr,” composed of two elements: “Þórr” (thunder, Thor) plus “fríðr” (beautiful, nutritious, to make beautiful, lovely, beloved). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding God associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of humankind, and also hallowing, healing, and fertility. The cognate deity in more extensive Germanic mythology and paganism was known in Old English as Þunor and in Old High German as Donar (Runic: Þonar), stemming from a common Germanic “*þunraz,” meaning “thunder.”
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은혜).
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은숙).
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은희).
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This name derives from the Basque “uda,” literally meaning "summer."
This name derives from the Old Norse “Oddbjǫrg,” composed of two elements: “oddr / oddi” (point, sharp point, peak, front ‘of an army,’ point ‘of a weapon,’ spear) plus “bjarga / borg” (to take care, to preserve, to protect, to save, to help, to rescue) or “borg” (fortification, stronghold, fortified city, castle). In turn, the name means “the one who helps someone in the frontline, the first line of defense of the castle.”
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name derives from the French “Hugues,” which in turn derives from an Old Low Franconian given name based on the Ancient Germanic element “*hugiz,” meaning “mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding.” The name became widespread in England after the conquest by the Normans. Hugues Capet (Hugh the Great) was the first “King of the Franks” from the eponymous Capetian dynasty, from his election to succeed the Carolingian Louis V in 987 until his death. Hugh of Lincoln (St. Hugh of Avalon), was, at the time of the Reformation, the best-known English saint after Thomas Becket.
This name derives from the French “Hugues,” which in turn derives from an Old Low Franconian given name based on the Ancient Germanic element “*hugiz,” meaning “mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding.” The name became widespread in England after the conquest by the Normans. Hugues Capet (Hugh the Great) was the first “King of the Franks” from the eponymous Capetian dynasty, from his election to succeed the Carolingian Louis V in 987 until his death. Hugh of Lincoln (St. Hugh of Avalon), was, at the time of the Reformation, the best-known English saint after Thomas Becket.
This name derives from the Native American (Eskimo-Aleut, Greenlandic) “Uqalik / Ukaleq,” meaning “hare, arctic hare, polar hare.”
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.
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.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
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.
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*hildiz” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “wolf fighter.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the Germanic “Alfher” (from which Alvaro) or the Old Norse “Áleifr” from the Proto-Norse “*AnulaiƀaR” (from which Olaf). 2) From the Latin “ŏlīva” (olive, a symbol of peace, religious piety, or victory), referring to the fruit or the branch of the olive. 3) A third hypothesis, less accredited, is from the Mycenaean Greek “élaiwon (ἔλαιϝον),” Ancient Greek “élaion (ἔλαιον).” The names “Olaf” and “Oliver” are linked to the Latin root, but related to the Germanic and Norse, from (Alfher) and (Ólæifr). Saint Oliver Plunkett (1629–1681) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of Armagh and chief bishop of all of Ireland, who was the last victim of the papist plot.
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.
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Elisabeth. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (ELISHEVA).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Maja, a diminutive of Maria. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MIRIAM).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Maja, a diminutive of Maria. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MIRIAM).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Maja, a diminutive of Maria. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MIRIAM).
This name derives from the Finnish word “Ulpukka,” meaning “spatterdock, yellow water lily, cow lily, yellow pond-lily.” This word comes from the Latin “Nuphar lutea,” an aquatic plant of the family Nymphaeaceae, native to temperate regions of Europe, northwest Africa, and western Asia. In fact “lutea” derives from “lūtĕum,” meaning “yellow color, yolk.”
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Chlodowich and Chlodovech,” composed of two elements: “*hlūdaz,” meaning (to hear, loud, sound, noise / famous) and “wīg,” meaning (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). The name means “glorious in the battle, famous warrior.” 1) Saint Louise de Marillac was the co-founder, with St. Vincent de Paul, of the Daughters of Charity. She is venerated as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. 2) The Blessed Louise of Savoy (1461–1503) was a member of the French royal family, who gave up a life of privilege and comfort to become a Poor Clare nun. The Roman Catholic Church has beatified her.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
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.
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.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Lūdós (Λῡδός) Lydía (Λυδία),” meaning “the Lydian woman, the woman of purple, an inhabitant of Lydia, a Lydian.” Lydia of Thyatira is a woman mentioned in the New Testament who is regarded as the first documented convert to Christianity in Europe. Several Christian denominations have designated her a saint. Lydia was most likely a Greek even though she lived in a Roman settlement. She was a well-to-do agent of a purple-dye firm in Thyatira, a city southeast of Pergamum and approximately 40 miles inland, across the Aegean Sea from Athens. Lydós was the third king of Maeonia in succession to his father, Atys. He was the third and last king of the Atyad dynasty. According to Herodotus, Maeonia became known as Lydia after Lydus’s reign. Lydiane is also a town in east-central Senegal in the Kaolack region.
Small mother
This name derives from the Old French name “Humbert,” composed of two Old High German elements: “hūn” (child, cub, puppy) plus “*berhtaz” (light, bright, clear, shining one). In turn, the name means “the brightness of the puppy, famous warrior, powerful illustrious.” Humbert is the French form used by immigrants of the “Hunbert” area. The second element may be derived from the name element “hun” derived from the Late Latin “hūn,” from the Turkic Ottoman “Hun-yü,” the name of a Mongolian Uralic tribe “Hiung-nu” (Chinese: Xiōngnú). Humbert (1793), Umberche (1170), Unguebert (1214) is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region of France. Umberto I or Humbert I (1844–1900), nicknamed the Good (Italian: Il Buono), was the King of Italy from January 9, 1878, until his death. Umberto III, dubbed the Blessed (Italian: il Benedetto), was Count of Savoy from 1148 to 1189. His parents were Amadeus III of Savoy and Mahaut (or Mafalda, or Matilda) of Albon, the sister of Guy IV of Dauphinois. His memorial day is on March 4. Humbert († 842) was the bishop of Würzburg from 833 until his death.
It is a Korean female given name. It was the third-most common name for baby girls in South Korea in 1970, falling to sixth place in 1980. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은정).
worship, devotion
This name derives from the Old High German name “Hugiberht,” composed of “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) and “*berhtaz” (light, brilliant, clear, shining one). In turn, the name means “a big heart, bright spirit, shining spirit.” Saint Hubertus or Hubert was the first Bishop of Liège. He was a Christian saint who was the patron saint of hunters, mathematicians, opticians, and metalworkers. Saint Hubertus was widely venerated during the Middle Ages. The iconography of his legend is entangled with the legend of Saint Eustace.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Late Latin “urbānus,” meaning “citizen, a resident of the city, city-dweller.” The name was used for eight popes, a figure with this name is also mentioned in the letter of St. Paul to the Romans. Urban II was Pope from 12 March 1088 until his death on 29 July 1099. He is best known for initiating the First Crusade (1096–1099) and setting up the modern-day Roman Curia in the manner of a royal court to help run the Church.
This name derives from the Hebrew “‘ôrâh > ‘ûrı̂y’êl > Uriy’el,” meaning “Jehovah (Yahweh) is my light (flame).” Uriel is one of the archangels of post-Exilic Rabbinic tradition, and also of certain Christian traditions. His name may have analogies. Where a fourth archangel is added to the named three, to represent the four cardinal points, Uriel is generally the fourth. Uriel is listed as the fourth angel in Christian Gnostics (under the name Phanuel), by Gregory the Great, and in the angelology of Pseudo-Dionysius. However, the Book of Enoch clearly distinguishes the two Angels; Uriel means ‘the Light of God’ while Phanuel means “the Face of God.”
This name derives from the Spanish “urraca,” meaning “magpie.” Early medieval documents show that the name originates from the Basque-Navarrese region, which makes a Basque origin probable, in this perspective, the name is sometimes traced back to the Basque word “urra” meaning “hazel or kernel.” At the same time, other sources propose an onomatopoeic origin. Urraca (1079–1126) was Queen of León, Castile, and Galicia from 1109 until her death in childbirth. She claimed the imperial title as Empress of All Spain and Empress of All Galicia.
This name derives from the Spanish “urraca,” meaning “magpie.” Early medieval documents show that the name originates from the Basque-Navarrese region, which makes a Basque origin probable, in this perspective, the name is sometimes traced back to the Basque word “urra” meaning “hazel or kernel.” At the same time, other sources propose an onomatopoeic origin. Urraca (1079–1126) was Queen of León, Castile, and Galicia from 1109 until her death in childbirth. She claimed the imperial title as Empress of All Spain and Empress of All Galicia.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
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Morning, Dawn, Sun rise, beginning of life. Usha is also one of the names of Goddess Shakti, in Indian culture and mythology.
This name derives from the Latin “iustĭtĭa > iustus,” meaning “rightful, legal, fair, honest, equal, impartial.” 1) Justin, known as Justin the Martyr or Justin the Philosopher (100–163/167), was a Christian martyr, philosopher, and apologist in Greek and Latin, author of the “Dialogue with Triffon,” the “First Apology of Christians” and the “Second Apology of Christians.” We also owe him the oldest description of the Eucharistic rite. He was one of the first Christian philosophers and the most excellent interpreter of the Logos among the patristic authors who lived in the second century. 2) Saint Justina (Justine) was a martyr, commemorated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Justina lived between the end of the third and the beginning of the fourth century. She was born into a distinct Paduan family during the period of Diocletian’s Christian persecution.
This name probably derives from the Germanic (Langobardic) “Auda,” from the Ancient Germanic “*audaz,” meaning “prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth, heiress” or from “*ōþ- > uodil,” meaning “One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory.” St Odile of Alsace (Odilia and Ottilia) (662–720), is a saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, although according to the current Roman Catholic liturgical calendar her feast day (December 13) is not officially commemorated although she is celebrated on this day in the Orthodox Church. She is a patroness of good eyesight and Alsace.
This name represents the short form of names ending with “-olin, -ólín, -olina, -ólína, -oline” and the female form of “Ole,” Old Norse variant form, Old Swedish and Danish and Norwegian younger form of “Óli.” In turn, is the pet form of Ólafr and Ólafur, from the Old Norse “anu *laiƀaR > læfan > ÓlæifR > Ólafr,” meaning “to shine, gleam, elf, supernatural being, a descendant of ancestors, relic of the ancestors, legacy of ancestors.”
Daughter of God
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
It is a Korean female given name. It was the eighth-most popular name for baby girls born in South Korea in 1980. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은영).
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은채).
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) plus “*balðraz” (power, strength, brave, bold, able-bodied). The name means “bold spirit.” Ubald of Gubbio (~1084–1160) was a medieval bishop of Gubbio, in Umbria, today venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Saint Ubaldo Day is still celebrated at the Basilica of Sant’Ubaldo in Gubbio in his honor, as well as at Jessup, Pennsylvania.
This name derives from the Old High German name “Hugiberht,” composed of “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) and “*berhtaz” (light, brilliant, clear, shining one). In turn, the name means “a big heart, bright spirit, shining spirit.” Saint Hubertus or Hubert was the first Bishop of Liège. He was a Christian saint who was the patron saint of hunters, mathematicians, opticians, and metalworkers. Saint Hubertus was widely venerated during the Middle Ages. The iconography of his legend is entangled with the legend of Saint Eustace.
This name is of Basque origin, composed of two elements: “uda” (summer) plus “berri” (new). In turn, the name literally means “new summer.”
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) plus “*balðraz” (power, strength, brave, bold, able-bodied). The name means “bold spirit.” Ubald of Gubbio (~1084–1160) was a medieval bishop of Gubbio, in Umbria, today venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Saint Ubaldo Day is still celebrated at the Basilica of Sant’Ubaldo in Gubbio in his honor, as well as at Jessup, Pennsylvania.
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.
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.
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.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
This name derives from the Old High German “Wolfhraban and Wolfhram,” composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*hrabnaz > raban” (raven). Wulf and Wolf were one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic and Nordic names. It could figure as the first element in dithematic names, as in Wulfstan, but especially as the second element, in the form “-ulf, / -olf.” The numerous names in -wulf, -ulf, -olf gave rise to hypocorisms (pet) from an early time, which were later also treated as given names in their own right. The wolf is a significant figure in Germanic and Norse paganism for more than a thousand years. 1) Wolfram von Eschenbach (~1170–1220) was a German knight and poet, regarded as one of the greatest epic poets of his time. As a Minnesinger, he also wrote lyric poetry. 2) Wolfram von Richthofen (1895–1945) was a German Generalfeldmarschall (General Field Marshal) of the Luftwaffe (German Air Force) during the Second World War.
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Bella, a short form of several name ending in “-bella.” It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BELLA).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Elisabet. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (ELISHEVA).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Elisabet. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (ELISHEVA).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Brigitta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Celtic, and Gaelic origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BRIGHID).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Karin. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) (AIKATERĪ́NĒ) and (KARL).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Margreta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MARGARĪ́TĒS).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Karin. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) (AIKATERĪ́NĒ) and (KARL).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Maja, a diminutive of Maria. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MIRIAM).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Brigitta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Celtic, and Gaelic origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BRIGHID).
This name derives from the Old High German “Odalgart,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- > uodil” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory) or “*audaz > ôt” (prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*gardaz” (court, yard, enclosure, garden, protection, refuge). In turn, the name means “protection and defense of the heritage, protection of own land.”
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Latin “ultĭmus,” meaning “finally, the oldest, the most remote, supreme, highest, ultimate, the highest.” The Medieval Latin meaning is “last one, the purpose of not having any more children.” The name-day is celebrated on November 1, the Feast of All Saints.
This name derives from the Old High German “Chlodowich and Chlodovech,” composed of two elements: “*hlūdaz,” meaning (to hear, loud, sound, noise / famous) and “wīg,” meaning (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). The name means “glorious in the battle, famous warrior.” 1) Saint Louise de Marillac was the co-founder, with St. Vincent de Paul, of the Daughters of Charity. She is venerated as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. 2) The Blessed Louise of Savoy (1461–1503) was a member of the French royal family, who gave up a life of privilege and comfort to become a Poor Clare nun. The Roman Catholic Church has beatified her.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
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.
This name derives from the Latin “ŭmbra > umbellă > Umbelina,” meaning “shade, shadow. In turn, the name means “one who gives a protective shadow, one who has a little shadow.” Ombria is one of toadstone (shadow-stone), a mythical stone or gem thought to be found in, or produced by, a toad, and is supposed to be an antidote to poison. Artifacts called “toadstones” were the fossilized teeth of Lepidotes, an extinct genus of ray-finned fish from the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, as they appeared to be “stones that are perfect in form.” The feast day is traditionally celebrated on August 21, in memory of St. Ombelina of Jully, who died in 1136.
This name derives from the Latin “hŭmĭlis,” meaning “small in stature, humble, modest, simple,” which in turn derives from the Latin “humus,” meaning “earth, soil.” Saint Humilis de Bisignano (Italian: Umile de Bisignano) (1582–1637), a Franciscan, is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Umiliana de’ Cerchi (Florence, 1219–1246) was an Italian nun. Venerated in Florence, was beatified in 1634.
It is a Korean female given name. In 1970 it was the 5th-most popular name for baby girls born in South Korea, falling to 8th place by 1980. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은경).
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “iustĭtĭa > iustus,” meaning “rightful, legal, fair, honest, equal, impartial.” 1) Justin, known as Justin the Martyr or Justin the Philosopher (100–163/167), was a Christian martyr, philosopher, and apologist in Greek and Latin, author of the “Dialogue with Triffon,” the “First Apology of Christians” and the “Second Apology of Christians.” We also owe him the oldest description of the Eucharistic rite. He was one of the first Christian philosophers and the most excellent interpreter of the Logos among the patristic authors who lived in the second century. 2) Saint Justina (Justine) was a martyr, commemorated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Justina lived between the end of the third and the beginning of the fourth century. She was born into a distinct Paduan family during the period of Diocletian’s Christian persecution.
This name derives from the Latin “iustĭtĭa > iustus,” meaning “rightful, legal, fair, honest, equal, impartial.” 1) Justin, known as Justin the Martyr or Justin the Philosopher (100–163/167), was a Christian martyr, philosopher, and apologist in Greek and Latin, author of the “Dialogue with Triffon,” the “First Apology of Christians” and the “Second Apology of Christians.” We also owe him the oldest description of the Eucharistic rite. He was one of the first Christian philosophers and the most excellent interpreter of the Logos among the patristic authors who lived in the second century. 2) Saint Justina (Justine) was a martyr, commemorated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Justina lived between the end of the third and the beginning of the fourth century. She was born into a distinct Paduan family during the period of Diocletian’s Christian persecution.
This name is of African (Igbo) origin, composed of two elements: “ụzọ” (road, way) plus “amaka” (very good, well, right). In turn the name means “one who takes the right path, a very good road”.
This name is of Germanic origin, composed of two elements: “*hugiz” (mind, bright in mind and spirit, heart, mind, thought, sense, understanding) plus “*balðraz” (power, strength, brave, bold, able-bodied). The name means “bold spirit.” Ubald of Gubbio (~1084–1160) was a medieval bishop of Gubbio, in Umbria, today venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Saint Ubaldo Day is still celebrated at the Basilica of Sant’Ubaldo in Gubbio in his honor, as well as at Jessup, Pennsylvania.
This name derives from the Basque “uda,” literally meaning "summer."
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Bella, a short form of several name ending in “-bella.” It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BELLA).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Brigitta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Celtic, and Gaelic origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BRIGHID).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Karin. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) (AIKATERĪ́NĒ) and (KARL).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Margreta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MARGARĪ́TĒS).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Margreta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MARGARĪ́TĒS).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda plus Karin. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) (AIKATERĪ́NĒ) and (KARL).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda and Maja, a diminutive of Maria. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (MIRIAM).
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old French name “Humbert,” composed of two Old High German elements: “hūn” (child, cub, puppy) plus “*berhtaz” (light, bright, clear, shining one). In turn, the name means “the brightness of the puppy, famous warrior, powerful illustrious.” Humbert is the French form used by immigrants of the “Hunbert” area. The second element may be derived from the name element “hun” derived from the Late Latin “hūn,” from the Turkic Ottoman “Hun-yü,” the name of a Mongolian Uralic tribe “Hiung-nu” (Chinese: Xiōngnú). Humbert (1793), Umberche (1170), Unguebert (1214) is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region of France. Umberto I or Humbert I (1844–1900), nicknamed the Good (Italian: Il Buono), was the King of Italy from January 9, 1878, until his death. Umberto III, dubbed the Blessed (Italian: il Benedetto), was Count of Savoy from 1148 to 1189. His parents were Amadeus III of Savoy and Mahaut (or Mafalda, or Matilda) of Albon, the sister of Guy IV of Dauphinois. His memorial day is on March 4. Humbert († 842) was the bishop of Würzburg from 833 until his death.
This name derives from the Old Irish “úan” (Welsh: oen), meaning “lamb.” This name is a Celtic feminine given name.
This name derives from the Old Norse “*unr > una,” meaning “to enjoy, be happy with, be content.”
This name has two different branches: 1) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unnaną > unna,” meaning “to grant, bestow, to love.” 2) From the Proto-Germanic and Old Norse “*unþī > unnr / uðr,” meaning “wave.”
This name comes from “Urcino,” a city in Corsica, now destroyed. Urciscenus was Bishop of Pavia from around 183 until he died in 216. He is believed to have led the see of Pavia during a period of increased persecutions.
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This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
This name derives from the Old Irish “úan” (Welsh: oen), meaning “lamb.” This name is a Celtic feminine given name.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
This name is a feminine form of the Thor and Þórr. The name also represents the short form of Victoria. It is of Old Norse and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (ÞÓRR) and (VICTŎR). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding god.
It is a Korean female given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은아).
This is a Combination (composed, blended name) of Ulla, a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula and Hulda, and Brigitta. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, Latin, Celtic, and Gaelic origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) (URSUS) and (BRIGHID).
This name derives from the Old High German “Uodalrich,” composed of two elements: “*ōþ- / *audaz” (One’s ancestral land, homeland, home, territory/prosperity, fortune, riches, wealth) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “the power of richness, the distinction for its own property, prosperity, and power, mighty to riches. Saint Ulrich of Augsburg (~890–973) was the Bishop of Augsburg and a Roman Catholic Church leader in Germany. He was the first saint to be canonized. Ulrika Nish was a nun of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross (Ingenbohl sisters). In the Roman Catholic Church, she is venerated as Blessed.
Ulvi is a female given name from the place-name Ulvi a village in Mustvee Parish, Jõgeva County in northeastern Estonia, probably from the Old Norse “ulfr” meaning “wolf.”
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.
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.
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.
This name derives from the Old High German “Ortrud,” composed of two elements: “*uzdaz” (sharp point, place) and “*þrūþi” (strength). Princess Ortrud Bertha Adelheid Hedwig (1925–1980) was a member of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg and a Princess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg by birth, and through her marriage to Ernest Augustus IV, Prince of Hanover, member of the House of Hanover.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Urðr,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic and Proto-Norse “*wurdiz / *werþaną > urðr / verða” meaning “fate, destiny, to become, to happen, to come about.” Urðr is one of the Norns in Norse mythology. Along with Verðandi (happening or present) and Skuld (debt or future), Urðr makes up a trio of Norns described as deciding the fates of people. Urðr is attested in stanza 20 of the “Poetic Edda” poem “Völuspá” and the “Prose Edda” book “Gylfaginning.”
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Old Norse name “úlfr,” from the Ancient Germanic element “*-wulfaz,” meaning “wolf.” Wulf and Wolf were one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic and Nordic names. It could figure as the first element in dithematic names, as in Wulfstan, but mostly as the second element, “-ulf, / -olf.” The numerous names ending in -wulf, -ulf, -olf gave rise to hypocorisms (pet) from an early time, which was later also treated as given names in their own right. The wolf is a significant figure in Germanic and Norse paganism for more than a thousand years.
This name is a Scandinavian diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, and Hulda. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
plum
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This name derives from Old High German Adalhaid / Adalhaidis, composed of two elements: “*aþalaz” (noble, nobleman, aristocratic, eminent, glorious, excellent one) plus “*haiduz” (kind, sort, appearance, personality, character, manner, path). In turn, the name means “noble kind, of the noble sort.” Some forms, such as Adel or Heide, represents the pet form of names ending in “-heid” (often Adelheid) or beginning with “Heid- / Heide-.” Adelaide of Saxony-Meiningen (1792–1849) was Queen Consort of the United Kingdom from 1830 to 1837 as the wife of William IV of Hanover. She was the eldest daughter of George I of Saxony-Meiningen, and his wife, Luisa Eleonora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg. Adelaide of Italy (931–999), also called Adelaide of Burgundy, was the second wife of Holy Roman Emperor Otto the Great. He was crowned as the Holy Roman Empress with him by Pope John XII in Rome on February 2, 962.
This name is a German diminutive of Ulrika, Ursula, Hulda and represents a form of Ulla. It is of Germanic, Old Norse, and Latin origin and comes from the following roots: (UODALRICH) (HULDA) and (URSUS).
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.
This name derives from the Latin “iustĭtĭa > iustus,” meaning “rightful, legal, fair, honest, equal, impartial.” 1) Justin, known as Justin the Martyr or Justin the Philosopher (100–163/167), was a Christian martyr, philosopher, and apologist in Greek and Latin, author of the “Dialogue with Triffon,” the “First Apology of Christians” and the “Second Apology of Christians.” We also owe him the oldest description of the Eucharistic rite. He was one of the first Christian philosophers and the most excellent interpreter of the Logos among the patristic authors who lived in the second century. 2) Saint Justina (Justine) was a martyr, commemorated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Justina lived between the end of the third and the beginning of the fourth century. She was born into a distinct Paduan family during the period of Diocletian’s Christian persecution.
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: from the Latin “Ulpianus.” It is a name of ethnic origin from “Ulpius” an ancient city. 1) Ulpian (Domitius Ulpianus) († 228) was a Roman jurist and imperial official whose writings supplied one-third of the total content of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I’s monumental Digest, or Pandects (completed 533). 2) Trajan (Marcus Ulpius Nerva Traianus); 53–117 AD) was Roman emperor from 98 AD until his death in 117 AD. 3) Ulpia Marciana was the beloved elder sister of Roman Emperor Trajan. She was the eldest child born to Roman woman Marcia and the Spanish Roman senator Marcus Ulpius Traianus.
This name derives from Old Norse “Þórfríðr,” composed of two elements: “Þórr” (thunder, Thor) plus “fríðr” (beautiful, nutritious, to make beautiful, lovely, beloved). In Norse mythology, Thor (Old Norse: Þórr) is a hammer-wielding God associated with thunder, lightning, storms, oak trees, strength, the protection of humankind, and also hallowing, healing, and fertility. The cognate deity in more extensive Germanic mythology and paganism was known in Old English as Þunor and in Old High German as Donar (Runic: Þonar), stemming from a common Germanic “*þunraz,” meaning “thunder.”
Princess
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This name derives from the Old High German “Chlodowich and Chlodovech,” composed of two elements: “*hlūdaz,” meaning (to hear, loud, sound, noise / famous) and “wīg,” meaning (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). The name means “glorious in the battle, famous warrior.” 1) Saint Louise de Marillac was the co-founder, with St. Vincent de Paul, of the Daughters of Charity. She is venerated as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. 2) The Blessed Louise of Savoy (1461–1503) was a member of the French royal family, who gave up a life of privilege and comfort to become a Poor Clare nun. The Roman Catholic Church has beatified her.
This name derives from the Latin “unda,” meaning “a wave, crowd, multitude.” Undines, also called Ondines, are elementals, enumerated as the water elementals in works of alchemy by Paracelsus. They also appear in European folklore as fairy-like creatures; the name may be used interchangeably with those of other water spirits. According to a theory advanced by Paracelsus, an Undine is a water nymph or water spirit, the elemental of water.
This name derives from the Latin “unda,” meaning “a wave, crowd, multitude.” Undines, also called Ondines, are elementals, enumerated as the water elementals in works of alchemy by Paracelsus. They also appear in European folklore as fairy-like creatures; the name may be used interchangeably with those of other water spirits. According to a theory advanced by Paracelsus, an Undine is a water nymph or water spirit, the elemental of water.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Germanic and Old Norse “Ulfrún,” composed of two elements: “*-wulfaz” (wolf) plus “*rūnō” (secret, secret lore, secret knowledge, magic). In turn, the name means “the wolf's secrets.”
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Ouranós (οὐρᾰνός) Ouraníā (Οὐρᾰνῐ́ᾱ),” meaning “heavenly one.” Ourania, or Urania, was one of the nine Mousai (Muses), the goddesses of music, song, and dance. In Classical times Ourania came to be titled the muse of astronomy and astronomical writings. In this guise, she was depicted pointing to a globe with a rod. Ouranós (Οὐρανός)”, meaning “sky, heaven, the god of the heavens” was the primal Greek god personifying the sky. His equivalent in Roman mythology was Caelus. In Ancient Greek literature, Uranus, or “father sky,” was the son and husband of Gaia, Mother Earth. According to Hesiod’s Theogony, Uranus was conceived by Gaia alone, but other sources cite Aether as his father.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
This name derives from the Latin “ursus > ursa,” meaning “little female bear.” Saint Ursula is a British Christian saint. Her feast day in the extraordinary form calendar of the Catholic Church is October 21. Because of the lack of accurate information about the anonymous group of holy virgins who, on some uncertain date, were killed at Cologne, their commemoration was omitted from the Catholic calendar of saints for liturgical celebration when it was revised in 1969, but they have been kept in the Roman Martyrology. Sister Ursula Ledóchowska (1865–1939), was an Austrian-born religious leader. She became a Roman Catholic nun and founded the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus. She is a prominent member of the Ledóchowski family.
Excellence
UNITY
patient
Beauty
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
It is a Korean female given name. It was the third-most common name for baby girls in South Korea in 1970, falling to sixth place in 1980. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은정).
Family
A wish
blue
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.
This name derives from the Old Norse “Úlfhildr,” composed of two elements: “ulfr” (wolf) plus “hildr” (battle, fight). In turn, the name means “fighting wolf, the one who fights like a wolf.”
It is a Korean female given name. In 1970 it was the 5th-most popular name for baby girls born in South Korea, falling to 8th place by 1980. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (은경).
God's will
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