Browse 1,850 beautiful baby unisex names with meanings and origins. Discover the perfect unisex name for your baby from cultures around the world.
This name is of Anglo-Saxon origin and is a locational surname deriving from the place called “Tatham” in Lancashire near Lancaster. The placename is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as “Tathaim”, and in the Fines Court Rolls of Lancashire for 1202 as “Tateham”, meaning “Tata’s homestead.” The name derives from the Old English personal name “Tata” plus “Ham,” a settlement, farm, or homestead.
This name means “to cut, clipper, the cutter.” It derives from the surname Taylor, which is a variant of the English word “tailor,” meaning “tailor.” Tailor originally meant one who held that profession, and the word itself comes from the Norman-French “taillur,” which in turn derives from the Latin “taliāre,” meaning “to cut.”
Ted is a diminutive of Edward, Edwina, Edwin, Edmund and a short form of Theodore, Theodora, and Thaddeus. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon), Greek and Syriac-Aramaic origin and comes from the following roots: (ĒADWEARD) (THEODŌROS) (EADMUND) and (THADDAÎOS).
Teo is mainly a short form of Teodoro, Theodore, Theofilus, Theobald, Teodora, Teodosia, Teoline and other names beginning with (theo-, teo-). It is mostly of Greek and Germanic origin and comes from these main roots: (THEÓDŌROS) (THEÓPHILOS) and (DIETBALD).
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
Theo is mainly a short form of Theodore, Theodorus, Theofilus, Theobald, Teodora, Teodosia, Teoline and other names beginning with (theo-, teo-). It is of Greek and Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (THEODŌROS) (THEOPHILOS) And (DIETBALD).
This name derives from the Hebrew “Ṭôbı̂yâh / Ṭôbı̂yâhû > Tobhiyyah,” meaning “Yahweh is good, the goodness of God, pleasing to the Lord.” Tobías (Τοβίας) is an Ancient Greek version of the Hebrew biblical name. In the bible, there are several people called Tobias, especially in the “Book of Tobit.” The Book of Tobit is a book of scripture that is part of the Catholic and Orthodox biblical canon, pronounced canonical by the Council of Carthage of 397 and confirmed for Roman Catholics by the Council of Trent (1546).
This name derives from the Hebrew “Ṭôbı̂yâh / Ṭôbı̂yâhû > Tobhiyyah,” meaning “Yahweh is good, the goodness of God, pleasing to the Lord.” Tobías (Τοβίας) is an Ancient Greek version of the Hebrew biblical name. In the bible, there are several people called Tobias, especially in the “Book of Tobit.” The Book of Tobit is a book of scripture that is part of the Catholic and Orthodox biblical canon, pronounced canonical by the Council of Carthage of 397 and confirmed for Roman Catholics by the Council of Trent (1546).
This name derives from the Latin root “vincēre > victōria > victŏr,” meaning “conqueror, victory, (one who) conquers.” Victor is a masculine given name that has been used for centuries in numerous cultures and parts of the world. Victoria is a feminine first name. It is also used as a family name and is used as the female form corresponding to Victor. In Ancient Roman Religion, Victoria was the personified goddess of victory. She is the Roman equivalent of the Greek Goddess “Nike,” associated with “Bellona.” She was adapted from the Sabine agricultural Goddess Vacuna and had a temple on the Palatine hill. The Goddess “Vica Pota” was also sometimes identified with Victoria. In Ancient Roman religion, Vica Pota (Vincendi) was a Goddess whose shrine (Aedes) was located at the foot of the Velian Hill, on the site of the Domus of Publius Valerius Publicola. Pope Victor I (died 199) was a bishop of Rome, and hence a pope, in the late 2nd-century.
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
This name is a diminutive of Tamar, Tamara, Thomasina, Thomasine, Tamsin, and Tamika. It is of Hebrew and Aramaic origin and comes from the following roots: (TAMAR) (THOMAS) and (TAMIKA).
This name is of Sanskrit origin and means "honey bee or liquid, flowing".
Taron is a unisex name of various meanings and origins. There are several varieties of the name, including “Tarryn” and “Tarin.” It is found in a variety of cultures and ethnicities. This is a name coined in the 20th-century; some theories include: 1) Derived from the given name Tyrone, which in turn from “Tír Eoghain” (modern county Tyrone), one of the six counties of Northern Ireland. Eoghan in Irish and Scottish Gaelic is a form of Eugene and Owen. 2) A combination (composed, blended name) of Tara and Karen.
Taryn is a unisex name of various meanings and origins. There are several varieties of the name, including “Tarryn” and “Tarin.” It is found in a variety of cultures and ethnicities. This is a name coined in the 20th-century; some theories include: 1) Derived from the given name Tyrone, which in turn from “Tír Eoghain” (modern county Tyrone), one of the six counties of Northern Ireland. Eoghan in Irish and Scottish Gaelic is a form of Eugene and Owen. 2) A combination (composed, blended name) of Tara and Karen.
This name derives from the African (Yorùbá) “Taiwo,” meaning “have the first taste of the world.” Two of the most common destiny names among the Yorùbá are Taiwo (or Taiye) and Kehinde, which are given primarily to twins. It is believed that the first of the twins is Taiwo (or Taiye), whose intention in coming out first is to perceive whether or not the environment that they are about to enter is a good one for his or her superior to be in.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “theós (θεός)” (Phyrigian: deōs ”δεως”), meaning “divine, a deity, a god, God,” sometimes feminine, (i theós “ἡ θεός”), a goddess. 1) Theon of Smyrna was a Greek philosopher and mathematician, whose works were strongly influenced by the Pythagorean school of thought. 2) In Greek mythology, Theona was the daughter of Dymas, a sister of Hecuba and wife of Amycus. With him, she mothered Mimas. 3) Pope Theonas of Alexandria, 16th Pope of Alexandria & Patriarch of the See of St. Mark.
This name is a diminutive of Terry and Theresa. It is of Germanic and Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (ÞEUTRICH) and (THERASÍA�).
This name derives from Old High German “Theodorich,” composed of two elements: “*þeudō” (a people, a nation) plus “*rīkijaz” (kingly, royal, noble, mighty, distinguished, powerful, rich). In turn, the name means “a person that is distinguished and is full of strength.” Latin: Theodericus; Greek: Theodórikos (Θευδέριχος); Old English: Þēodrīc; Old Norse: Þjōðrēkr, Þīðrēkr. Theoderic the Great was king of the Ostrogoths, Italy’s ruler, regent of the Visigoths, and a governor of the Eastern Roman Empire. His Gothic name Þiudareiks translates into “people-king” or “ruler of the people.” A son of King Theodemir, an Amali nobleman, Theoderic was born in Pannonia after his people had defeated the Huns at the Battle of Nedao. Growing up as a hostage in Constantinople, Theoderic received a privileged education and succeeded his father as the Pannonian Ostrogoths leader in 471 AD.
Tibby is a diminutive of Tabitha and Theobald. It is of Aramaic and Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (ṬABĪTĀ) and (DIETBALD).
This name is a diminutive of Tipper and Xanthippe. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) and Ancient Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (TIPPE) and (XÁNTHIPPOS).
This name is a diminutive of Tipper and Xanthippe. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) and Ancient Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (TIPPE) and (XÁNTHIPPOS).
This name derives from the Roman day praenomen “Tĭtus,” linked to the Imperial Latin “Titianus,” meaning “honorable or resembling a dove, wild dove.” Titus Flavius Caesar Vespasianus Augustus; († 79) was Roman Emperor from 79 to 81. A member of the Flavian dynasty, Titus succeeded his father Vespasian upon his death, thus becoming the first Roman emperor to come to the throne after his father. The name day occurs on March 3, in memory of Saint Titian of Brescia (Italian: San Tiziano di Brescia), a 5th-century bishop of Brescia. In the list of bishops of Brescia, he is considered the fifteenth bishop of Brescia, succeeding Vigilius and preceding Paul II. (Biblical) the seventeenth book of the new testament of the Bible, the epistle to Titus. Saint Titian of Oderzo (Italian: San Tiziano di Oderzo) was a 7th-century bishop of Opitergium (Oderzo), in the Province of Treviso.
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name derives from the Latin root “vincēre > victōria > victŏr,” meaning “conqueror, victory, (one who) conquers.” Victor is a masculine given name that has been used for centuries in numerous cultures and parts of the world. Victoria is a feminine first name. It is also used as a family name and is used as the female form corresponding to Victor. In Ancient Roman Religion, Victoria was the personified goddess of victory. She is the Roman equivalent of the Greek Goddess “Nike,” associated with “Bellona.” She was adapted from the Sabine agricultural Goddess Vacuna and had a temple on the Palatine hill. The Goddess “Vica Pota” was also sometimes identified with Victoria. In Ancient Roman religion, Vica Pota (Vincendi) was a Goddess whose shrine (Aedes) was located at the foot of the Velian Hill, on the site of the Domus of Publius Valerius Publicola. Pope Victor I (died 199) was a bishop of Rome, and hence a pope, in the late 2nd-century.
This name derives from the Hebrew “Ṭôbı̂yâh / Ṭôbı̂yâhû > Tobhiyyah,” meaning “Yahweh is good, the goodness of God, pleasing to the Lord.” Tobías (Τοβίας) is an Ancient Greek version of the Hebrew biblical name. In the bible, there are several people called Tobias, especially in the “Book of Tobit.” The Book of Tobit is a book of scripture that is part of the Catholic and Orthodox biblical canon, pronounced canonical by the Council of Carthage of 397 and confirmed for Roman Catholics by the Council of Trent (1546).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the Romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (Han-geul) (도연).
This name is a diminutive of Theresa and a rare feminine form of Thracius. It is of Greek origin and derives from the following roots: (THERASIA) and (THRĀCĬUS), from the Ancient Greek “thráx (θρᾷξ) thrákes (θρᾷκεσ) > thraci > thrācĭus,” meaning “from Tracia.”
This name is a diminutive of Theresa and a rare feminine form of Thracius. It is of Greek origin and derives from the following roots: (THERASIA) and (THRĀCĬUS), from the Ancient Greek “thráx (θρᾷξ) thrákes (θρᾷκεσ) > thraci > thrācĭus,” meaning “from Tracia.”
This name has two possible derivations. The theories include: 1) From the Welsh name “Trefor,” from any of the numerous places in Wales, in particular, the one near Llangollen, from the Welsh “tre-f,” meaning “homestead, a big village, the settlement.” 2) An anglicized form of a Gaelic surname “Ó Treabhair,” meaning “descendant of Treabhar,” a byname meaning “industrious, tight, prudent.”
This name is composed of two Latin elements: “trīnus” (triple), plus “ūnitās,” from “ūnus” (one) plus “-itās,” meaning (unity). In turn, the name means “trinity, the number three, a triad.” The Trinity’s Christian doctrine defines God as three divine persons or hypostases: the Father, the Son (Jesus), and the Holy Spirit; “one God in three persons.” The three persons are distinct yet are one “substance, essence or nature.” The Trinity is considered to be a mystery of the Christian faith. According to this doctrine, there is only one God in three persons. Each person is God, whole and entire. They are distinct from one another in their relations of origin: as the Fourth Lateran Council declared, “it is the Father who generates, the Son who is begotten, and the Holy Spirit who proceeds.”
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “tiler,” meaning “doorkeeper of an inn, tiler of roofs, maker of tiles, doorkeeper.” It is used both as a surname and as a given name for both genders. The female version is in use only since the 1980s. Among the earliest recorded use of the surname is from the 14th- century, Wat Tyler of Kent, South East England, and later the American president John Tyler (1790–1862).
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “tiler,” meaning “doorkeeper of an inn, tiler of roofs, maker of tiles, doorkeeper.” It is used both as a surname and as a given name for both genders. The female version is in use only since the 1980s. Among the earliest recorded use of the surname is from the 14th- century, Wat Tyler of Kent, South East England, and later the American president John Tyler (1790–1862).
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “tiler,” meaning “doorkeeper of an inn, tiler of roofs, maker of tiles, doorkeeper.” It is used both as a surname and as a given name for both genders. The female version is in use only since the 1980s. Among the earliest recorded use of the surname is from the 14th- century, Wat Tyler of Kent, South East England, and later the American president John Tyler (1790–1862).
This name means “we are thankful” in African (Tumbuka) language.
This name is of Persian origin, rendered in Urdu “tarâne”, meaning “song, hymn, music”. 1) Tarana is a type of composition in Hindustani classical vocal music in which several words are based on Persian and Arabic phonemes, rendered at a medium “madhya” or fast “drut” pace “laya”. 2) Tarana is a town and a nagar panchayat in Ujjain district in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.
Tarryn is a unisex name of various meanings and origins. There are several varieties of the name, including “Tarryn” and “Tarin.” It is found in a variety of cultures and ethnicities. This is a name coined in the 20th-century; some theories include: 1) Derived from the given name Tyrone, which in turn from “Tír Eoghain” (modern county Tyrone), one of the six counties of Northern Ireland. Eoghan in Irish and Scottish Gaelic is a form of Eugene and Owen. 2) A combination (composed, blended name) of Tara and Karen.
This name means “to cut, clipper, the cutter.” It derives from the surname Taylor, which is a variant of the English word “tailor,” meaning “tailor.” Tailor originally meant one who held that profession, and the word itself comes from the Norman-French “taillur,” which in turn derives from the Latin “taliāre,” meaning “to cut.”
This name derives from the African (Xhosa) “-thânda,” meaning “loving one, I give love,to extend (love).”
This name means “be comforted” in African (Zulu) language.
This name is a diminutive of Tipper and Xanthippe. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) and Ancient Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (TIPPE) and (XÁNTHIPPOS).
This name is of Anglo-Saxon origin and is occupational for a maker of arrowheads, derived from the Middle English “tippe,” tip head, a derivation of the Old English pre-7th-Century “typpe.” Tipper is used as a given name and nickname.
This name is a diminutive of Tipper and Xanthippe. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) and Ancient Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (TIPPE) and (XÁNTHIPPOS).
This name is a diminutive of Tipper and Xanthippe. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) and Ancient Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (TIPPE) and (XÁNTHIPPOS).
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name derives from the Aramaic “tūmā,” (Hebrew: te’oma), (Ancient Greek: Thōmâs ‘θωμᾶσ’), meaning “twin, double, (astrology) Gemini.” The given name of Thomas the apostle was Yehuda (Jude, Judas). Originally it was not a proper name but an epithet of a figure of the New Testament. In the New Testament, the name refers to “Judas Thomas,” the second Judas of the Apostles (hence his name of ‘twin’). The use as a name has its origin and becomes more common in the early Middle Ages, with significant carriers including Thomas the Presbyter (7th-century) and Thomas the Slav (8th-century).
Sings with trills
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) First name Troy is derived from a surname which originally denoted an inhabitant of the northern French city of Troyes, Roman-era “Augustobona Tricassium / Tricassae”. 2) Alternatively, the name may be derived from the Irish (Gaelic) “Troightheach,” meaning “a footman, a pedestrian, a foot-soldier.” 3) From the city of Troy (Greek: Troía (Τροία); Latin: Trōia), a city well-known to both history and legend, and situated in northwest Anatolia in what is now Turkey (but which was known in Classical sources as Asia Minor), located south of the southwest end of the Dardanelles / Hellespont and northwest of Mount Ida at Hisaronu.
This name derives from the Slavic “cvet (цвет),” from the Old Church Slavonic “cvětŭ (цвѣтъ),” which in turn derives from the Proto-Slavic “*květъ,” meaning “bright, white, light, color, bloom, flower, color.” Cvjetnica is a moveable Christian feast that falls on the Sunday before Easter. The feast commemorates Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an event mentioned in each of the four canonical Gospels.
This name means “faith” in African (Tswana) language.
This name derives from the Persian “Tūrān,” meaning “the land of the Tur.” Tūrān is a region in Central Asia. The term, of Iranian origin, first appears in the Avesta texts, where the Tuirya is an Iranian tribe. Tur is a mythical character in the Persian epic Shahnameh (~1000 CE). Tur is the second son of the legendary Iranian king Fereydun and brother of both Salm and Iraj. Turan-shah († 1180) was a Turkish-Arabian ruler, the Ayyubid prince (emir) of Yemen (1174–1180), Baalbek (1179), Damascus (1176–1179), and finally Alexandria, where he died in 1180.
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태희).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태연). This name increases its popularity thanks to “Kim Tae-yeon” (born 1989), South Korean singer, dancer, actress, and member of the South Korean girl group (Girls’ Generation).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태희).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태희).
Tatenda is an African (Southern) name of "Shona" origin, meaning "thank you, we are grateful".
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Theódōros (Θεόδωρος),” composed of two elements: “theós (Θεός)” (divine, a deity, a god, God)plus “dôron (δῶρον)” (gift). In turn, the name means “God’s gift.” The name was popular among early Christians and was borne by several saints. The name has been used for saints, popes, several emperors, and a president. The feminine form of Theodore is Theodora. The name Dorothy derives from the same Greek root, in reverse order. Godiva is from an Anglo-Saxon version of the “gift of God.” 1) Saints Theodora and Didymus († 304) are Christian saints whose legend is based on a 4th-century “acta” and the word of Saint Ambrose. Theodora was a young noblewoman of Alexandria who had refused to offer sacrifice to the Roman gods. 2) Theodora (~500–548) was empress of the Roman (Byzantine) Empire and the wife of Emperor Justinian I.
This name is of African (Shona) origin,” composed of three elements: “ti” (we) plus “na” (with) plus (lord, God). In turn, the name means “we are with God.”
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name is a diminutive of Theresa and a rare feminine form of Thracius. It is of Greek origin and derives from the following roots: (THERASIA) and (THRĀCĬUS), from the Ancient Greek “thráx (θρᾷξ) thrákes (θρᾷκεσ) > thraci > thrācĭus,” meaning “from Tracia.”
This name is a diminutive of Theresa and a rare feminine form of Thracius. It is of Greek origin and derives from the following roots: (THERASIA) and (THRĀCĬUS), from the Ancient Greek “thráx (θρᾷξ) thrákes (θρᾷκεσ) > thraci > thrācĭus,” meaning “from Tracia.”
Tuesday is a day of the week occurring after Monday and before Wednesday. The English name derives from Old English “Tiwesdæg” and Middle English “Tewesday,” meaning “Tīw’s Day” (the day of Tiw). Tiw is the Old English form of the Proto-Germanic god “*Tîwaz or Týr,” the Norse and Germanic god of war and law. Tiw was equated with Mars in the Roman religion, and the name of the day is a translation of Latin “dies Martis”.
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태영).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and Latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태연). This name increases its popularity thanks to “Kim Tae-yeon” (born 1989), South Korean singer, dancer, actress, and member of the South Korean girl group (Girls’ Generation).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태영).
This name means “we are pleased” in African (Shona) language.
This name means “enough to give thanks” in African (Yorùbá) language.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “theós (θεός)” (Phyrigian: deōs ”δεως”), meaning “divine, a deity, a god, God,” sometimes feminine, (i theós “ἡ θεός”), a goddess. 1) Theon of Smyrna was a Greek philosopher and mathematician, whose works were strongly influenced by the Pythagorean school of thought. 2) In Greek mythology, Theona was the daughter of Dymas, a sister of Hecuba and wife of Amycus. With him, she mothered Mimas. 3) Pope Theonas of Alexandria, 16th Pope of Alexandria & Patriarch of the See of St. Mark.
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Theodótos (Θεοδότος),” composed of two elements: “theós (θεός)” (divine, a deity, a god, God) plus “dídōmi (δίδωμι) dotós (δοτός)” (give, present, offer, grant, allow, permit). In turn, the name means “given to God, the gift of God.” Theodotus of Byzantium was an early Christian writer from Byzantium, one of several named Theodotus, whose writings were condemned as heresy in the early church. He claimed that Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary and the Holy Spirit as a non-divine man, and though later “adopted” by God upon baptism (that is to say, he became the Christ), was not himself God until after his resurrection. Theodote was the second consort empress and consort of Constantine VI of the Byzantine Empire. Theodote was also a member of an illustrious family in Constantinople.
This name is composed of two Latin elements: “trīnus” (triple), plus “ūnitās,” from “ūnus” (one) plus “-itās,” meaning (unity). In turn, the name means “trinity, the number three, a triad.” The Trinity’s Christian doctrine defines God as three divine persons or hypostases: the Father, the Son (Jesus), and the Holy Spirit; “one God in three persons.” The three persons are distinct yet are one “substance, essence or nature.” The Trinity is considered to be a mystery of the Christian faith. According to this doctrine, there is only one God in three persons. Each person is God, whole and entire. They are distinct from one another in their relations of origin: as the Fourth Lateran Council declared, “it is the Father who generates, the Son who is begotten, and the Holy Spirit who proceeds.”
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태영).
It is a Korean unisex given name. It is the romanization and latinization version from the Korean (han-geul) (태영).
This name derives from the Native American (Iroquoian, Cherokee) “Tanasi.” The meaning is still today quite uncertain. Some accounts suggest it is a Cherokee modification of an earlier Yuchi word. It has been said to mean “meeting place, winding river,” or “river of the great bend.” According to James Mooney, the name “cannot be analyzed” and its meaning is lost. Tanasi is a historic Overhill Cherokee village site in Monroe County, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States. The village is best known as the source of the name for the state of Tennessee.
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
This name is the Scandinavian male version of “Toni,” a pet form of names ending with the element “-ton.” The feminine version instead represents the diminutive form of the name “Antonia.” The name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern, Coptic, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic and Catholic Church.
Generous
This name means “highly praiseworthy” and derives from the root “Antōnius,” a Gens (Roman family name) to which (Marcus Antonius) belonged. That name initially came from the Etruscan language. Its use as a Christian name was due to the worship of 1) Saint Anthony, a Christian saint from Egypt and a prominent leader among the Desert Fathers who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox Church, Coptic Orthodox Church, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic Catholic Church. 2) Anthony of Padua (Anthony of Lisbon), a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. Though he died in Padua, he was born and raised in a wealthy family in Lisbon. Noted by his contemporaries for his forceful preaching and expert knowledge of scripture, he was the second-fastest canonized saint and was declared a Doctor of the Church.
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