Discover 100 beautiful baby names meaning nature. Explore names that embody Connected to the natural world from diverse cultures and traditions.
Tyne derives from an English surname. Tyne is a river in North East England. Nothing definite is known of the origin of the designation “Tyne,” nor is the river known by that name until the Saxon period: Tynemouth is recorded in Anglo-Saxon as Tinanmuðe. There is a theory that “Tīn” was a word that meant “river” in the local Celtic language or in a language spoken in England before the Celts came.The word Tīn could also derive from "tinan", which means to dissolve or disperse.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “byrele / byrle,” used in the middle age meaning “cupbearer or knotty wood.” A burl (American English) is a tree growth in which the grain has grown in a deformed manner. It is commonly found in a rounded outgrowth on a tree trunk or branch filled with small knots from dormant buds.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Skye is both a surname and a given name and derives from “Skye” or “the Isle of Skye,” the largest and most northerly large island in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland. Skye is also a variant of Sky, which derives from the Germanic and Old Norse “*skiwją / *skiwô > ský,” meaning “a cloud, cloud, cloud cover.”
Origin: scottish (gaelic)
This name derived from the English surname “Nash,” by colloquialism, and was established from an early date in Ireland and Wales, from the Old English “æsce,” from the Proto-Germanic “*askǭ,” meaning “ash, the solid remains of a fire.” It is topographical and describes a person who lived “at ash (tree). The name was popularized by the American mathematician John Forbes Nash (Born 1928) and further popularized in the 1990s by the television series “Nash Bridges.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname and place name “Creighton,” composed of two elements: From the Old Irish “crích / críoch” (end, boundary, limit, region, territory) plus the Old English “tūn” (a farm, a hamlet, town). In turn, the name means “border town.” Mount Creighton is a mountain about 3 nautical miles (6 km) east-northeast of Mount Gavaghan in the Porthos Range of the Prince Charles Mountains.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Perry derives from a surname, which is both English and Welsh in origin. It can be derived from the Middle English “perrie”, Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “pyrige,” meaning “pear tree,” or else from the Welsh “ap Herry,” meaning “son of Herry,” which is the diminutive of Henry and Harold. A famous bearer of the surname was Matthew Perry (1794–1858), the American naval officer who opened Japan to the West.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*widu / Vitu,” which means “forest as a borderline, forest, wood, tree.” Some forms of the name derived from the Latin “vīta,” which means “life.” Guido In the past was the diminutive form of other names, such as Guidobaldo and Guidalberto, which are Germanic, but already in the past, “Wido” was confused with Latin Vitus (today Vito), which in fact in many languages all names are entirely equivalent. Saint Guy of Anderlecht was a Christian saint. He was known as the Poor Man of Anderlecht. 2) Saint Vitus, according to Christian legend, was a Christian saint from Sicily. He died as a martyr during the persecution of Christians by co-ruling Roman Emperors Diocletian and Maximian in 303. Vitus is counted as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers of the Roman Catholic Church. 3) Guido is a slang term for a working-class urban Italian American. The “Guido” stereotype is multi-faceted. Initially, it was used as a demeaning term for Italian Americans in general.
Origin: germanic
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.
Origin: latin
Brent derives from “Brent,” an Old English place-name, given name, and surname. The origin of this name is still quite uncertain today. The theories include: The place-name could derive from the Celtic word meaning “holy one” (if it refers to the river Brent), or “high place,” literally “from a steep hill” (if it refers to the villages in Aomerset and Devon, England). The second hypothesis for the first element is “bent” from past tense and past participle of “bend” (not straight, turned, or inclined in some direction).
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Trent originates as a location name used as a surname and given name, referring to someone who lives by the River Trent in England “dweller by the Trent River.” The Trent River traditionally marked the division of north and south England. The name “Trent” comes from a Celtic word, possibly meaning “strongly flooding.” More specifically, the name may be a contraction of two Celtic words, “tros” (over) and “hynt” (way). It may indeed indicate a river that is prone to flooding. Trent is also a short form of “Trenton.”
Origin: english
This name derives from the Old English pre 7th-Century word “æwell”, meaning “river source or spring”. Ewell is a suburban area in Epsom and Ewell’s borough in Surrey with a primarily commercial village center. It has named neighborhoods: West Ewell, Ewell Court, East Ewell, Ewell Grove, and Ewell Downs. One rural locality on the slopes of the North Downs is also a neighborhood, North Looe. The place in Surrey was recorded in 675 as “Euuelle” in the Cartularium Saxonicum, while the same source records “Temple Ewell” in Kent as “Aewille” in 772.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “æspe,” meaning “an aspen or word for the tree.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old French “tan > tanneur,” from “tan“(Gaulish: *tanno-; Latin tannum), meaning “tanbark, tanner (job).” A tanner is a person whose occupation is to tan hides or convert them into the leather by the use of tan. The word tan represents: 1) Yellowish-brown color. 2) Darkening of the skin resulting from exposure to sunlight or similar light sources. 3) The bark of an oak or other tree from which tannic acid is obtained.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
From a surname that was from a place-name, itself derived from two Old English (Anglo-Saxon) elements: “eofor” (wild boar) plus “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing). In turn, the name means “the woodland boar.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name and surname, from “æsc” (ash) and “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing) “ash-tree wood or clearing.” Ashley was initially used for male children but later gained popularity as a female first name. Her sudden rise in popularity is generally attributed to the emerging female character of the soap opera Ashley Abbott on The Young and The Restless in 1982. In the United Kingdom, the name is used for both boys and girls. Aisling, a similar-sounding name of different etymology and Irish Gaelic origin, is a traditionally female noun meaning “vision” as a feminine spirit and became a popular name for girls early-to-mid the 20th-century. “Ashlyn” and “Ashlynn” are derived from this etymology, and “Ashley” may be back-derived as well. From the 19th-century, both groups of names have mixed, and the different variants are no longer attributable to a specific source.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name originates from a surname of the same name, which probably derives from the surname “Kinsley,” from “cyning lēah,” meaning “the king of the forest, king’s wood.” The name could be derived from an English given name “Ceolsige,” meaning “ship’s victory,” which could be an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name meaning “Cenel’s island.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Created by writing the word heaven backwards. This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “heofon,” accepting these as cognates, some scholars propose a further derivation from Proto-Germanic “*himinaz,” meaning “cover, heaven, sky.” Heaven (paradise) is a common religious, cosmological, mythological term for the physical or transcendent place from which heavenly beings (such as a God, angels, sky deities, saints, or venerated ancestors) originate, are enthroned, or inhabit. It is commonly believed that divine beings can descend to earth or incarnate and that earthly beings can ascend to Heaven in the afterlife or, in exceptional cases, enter Heaven alive.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is composed of two elements: “hēr” (here) or “hær” (hair) plus “hlǣw” (mountain, mound, hill, barrow, cairn). In turn, the ordinary meaning is “a mountain or hill full of trees.” Harlow is a town and local government district in the west of Essex, England. A new town, situated on the border with Hertfordshire and London, Harlow occupies a large land area on the south bank of the upper Stort Valley, which has been made navigable through other towns and features a canal section near its watermill.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
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.
Origin: latin
This name derives from the Latin “Mărĭus,” typical name of the Latin gens “Mărīa,” which is the plural of the Latin word “mărĕ,” meaning “sea.” The source is still today quite uncertain. The name seems to refer to the term “mas, maris,” which means “male, man.” It may also derive from the name of the god Mars, the Roman god of war, called initially “mavors,” which in turn derives from the Proto Indo-European root “*māwort-,” probably reconstructed from the Indian (Sanskrit: marutas). Gaius Marius was a Roman general and statesman. He held the office of consul an unprecedented seven times during his career.
Origin: latin
This name derives from an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name and surname, from “æsc” (ash) and “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing) “ash-tree wood or clearing.” Ashley was initially used for male children but later gained popularity as a female first name. Her sudden rise in popularity is generally attributed to the emerging female character of the soap opera Ashley Abbott on The Young and The Restless in 1982. In the United Kingdom, the name is used for both boys and girls. Aisling, a similar-sounding name of different etymology and Irish Gaelic origin, is a traditionally female noun meaning “vision” as a feminine spirit and became a popular name for girls early-to-mid the 20th-century. “Ashlyn” and “Ashlynn” are derived from this etymology, and “Ashley” may be back-derived as well. From the 19th-century, both groups of names have mixed, and the different variants are no longer attributable to a specific source.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin, composed of two elements: “wiell(a)” (spring or stream) plus “tūn” (an enclosed piece of ground, settlement, a large inhabited place, a town). In turn, the name means “the one who lives in a village near a stream.” It is an English locational name from any of the various places so called in Cumberland, Herefordshire, Norfolk, Somerset, Wiltshire, and Yorkshire. Both Wilton in Somerset and Yorkshire have their first element Old English pre-7th-century “wiell(a).” The place that has given its name to Wiltshire derives its name from the Celtic river “wylye,” an ancient British river name, possibly meaning “tricky stream, capricious.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
The name of the city was named in 1859 after James W. Denver (1817–1892), governor of the territory. This name derives from the old English “dena,” meaning (a native of Denmark) from the Germanic “*den-,” meaning (low ground) plus the Old Saxon “vār,” from the Germanic “*fēra-,” meaning (danger). The family name is from the place of that name in Norfolk, literally “ford or passage used by the Danes. 1) Denver sits on a high plain just east of the Rocky Mountains, which offers a view of great beauty to those looking westward from the city. The central district is on the South Platte River’s east bank, near the confluence of the latter with Cherry Creek. 2) Daniel Ramos, better known by his alias, ‘Denver,’ is one of the main characters in the Netflix series Money Heist.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “heofon,” accepting these as cognates, some scholars propose a further derivation from Proto-Germanic “*himinaz,” meaning “cover, heaven, sky.” Heaven (paradise) is a common religious, cosmological, mythological term for the physical or transcendent place from which heavenly beings (such as a God, angels, sky deities, saints, or venerated ancestors) originate, are enthroned, or inhabit. It is commonly believed that divine beings can descend to earth or incarnate and that earthly beings can ascend to Heaven in the afterlife or, in exceptional cases, enter Heaven alive.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English “winter,” meaning “winter (season),” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*wentruz,” in relation to the Proto-Indo-European “*wódr̥,” meaning “water.” Traditionally the fourth of the four seasons, typically regarded as being from December 23 to March 20 in continental regions of the Northern Hemisphere or the months of June, July, and August in the Southern Hemisphere. It is the time when the sun is lowest in the sky, resulting in short days, and the time of year with the most moderate atmospheric temperatures for the region.
Origin: germanic
This name derives from the Old English “winter,” meaning “winter (season),” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*wentruz,” in relation to the Proto-Indo-European “*wódr̥,” meaning “water.” Traditionally the fourth of the four seasons, typically regarded as being from December 23 to March 20 in continental regions of the Northern Hemisphere or the months of June, July, and August in the Southern Hemisphere. It is the time when the sun is lowest in the sky, resulting in short days, and the time of year with the most moderate atmospheric temperatures for the region.
Origin: germanic
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “azaléos (ἀζαλέος),” meaning “dry, dry earth.” Azaleas are flowering shrubs comprising two of the eight subgenera of the genus Rhododendron: the Tsutsuji (evergreen) and Pentanthera (deciduous). Azaleas bloom in summer, their flowers often lasting several weeks. Shade tolerant, they prefer living near or under trees.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) “Aldeleigh,” composed of two elements: “eald” (old) plus “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing). In turn, the name means “old forest.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
The name and surname derived from “Selby,” a town and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. The town’s origins date from establishing a Viking settlement on the banks of the River Ouse. The place is a native of a Viking colony; therefore, it seems to be of Norse origin. The name was popularized as a feminine name by the main character in the movie “The Woman in Red” (1935). It was later reinforced by the movie “Steel Magnolias” (1989), in which Julia Roberts played a character by this name. In Great Britain, 1.640 people share the surname Shelby according to our estimation. Surname Shelby is the 5.112nd most common in Great Britain. More than 5% of people whose name is Shelby live in Angus county. Shelby, in this case, is the 66th surname.
Origin: old norse
This name derives from a Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname, composed of two elements: “birnan” (to burn) plus “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing). In turn, the name means “burnt forest.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name originates from a surname of the same name, which probably derives from the surname “Kinsley,” from “cyning lēah,” meaning “the king of the forest, king’s wood.” The name could be derived from an English given name “Ceolsige,” meaning “ship’s victory,” which could be an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name meaning “Cenel’s island.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
From a surname that was from a place-name, itself derived from two Old English (Anglo-Saxon) elements: “eofor” (wild boar) plus “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing). In turn, the name means “the woodland boar.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from a Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname, composed of two elements: “birnan” (to burn) plus “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing). In turn, the name means “burnt forest.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Hawaiian “Kaylani,” composed of two elements: “kai” (ocean, sea) plus “lani” (sky, heaven). In turn, the name means “heavenly seas.”
Origin: hawaiian
This name originates from a surname of the same name, which probably derives from the surname “Kinsley,” from “cyning lēah,” meaning “the king of the forest, king’s wood.” The name could be derived from an English given name “Ceolsige,” meaning “ship’s victory,” which could be an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name meaning “Cenel’s island.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name originates from a surname of the same name, which probably derives from the surname “Kinsley,” from “cyning lēah,” meaning “the king of the forest, king’s wood.” The name could be derived from an English given name “Ceolsige,” meaning “ship’s victory,” which could be an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name meaning “Cenel’s island.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Norwood is a surname that was originally taken from an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place. This name is composed of two elements: “norþ” (north) plus “wudu” (wood, forest, woods, tree). In turn, the common meaning is “Nord forest.” The Hamilton-Norwood scale is used to classify the stages of male pattern baldness. The settings are described with a number from 1 to 7.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from Trenton (Trent’s town), from a New Jersey city established in the 17th-century by William Trent. The name means “Trent’s town.” William Trent (1715–1787) was a fur trader and merchant based in colonial Pennsylvania. Trent originates as a location name used as a surname and given name, referring to someone who lives by the river Trent in England “dweller by the Trent river.” The river Trent traditionally marked the division of north and south England. The name Trent comes from a Celtic word, possibly meaning “strongly flooding.” More specifically, the name may be a contraction of two Celtic words, “tros” (over) and “hynt” (way). It may indeed indicate a river that is prone to flooding. The river name is recorded as early as 115-117 by Tacitus as “Trisantona, Treenta, and Treanta” in the “Historia Ecclesiastica,” and as “trente” in the Domesday Book of 1086.
Origin: english
This name is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin,” composed of two elements: “*hæddre, hæð” (heather, forest, uncultivated land) plus “lēah” (woodland, a clearing ‘especially one used for farming,’ a meadow). In turn, the name means “the man of the forests or open fields.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is composed of two elements: “hege, hegen” (fenced, enclosure) plus “wudu” (wood, forest, woods, tree). In turn, the common meaning is “fenced forest.” Haywood Stenton “John” Jones was David Bowie’s father, whose real name is David Robert Jones, H.S. Jones was usually known as John Jones. He worked as a public relations officer for Dr. Barnardo’s Childrens’ Homes, and was married twice: firstly, in 1933, to Hilda Louise Sullivan; and, then, after their divorce, in 1947, to Margaret Mary Burns, known as Peggy, who was David’s mother.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
Wilburn is a toponymic surname derived from Welborne in Lincolnshire, composed of two elements: from the Old English “welle” (well) plus the Old Norse “brunnr / bruðr” (a stream, brook, river, or other running water). The name Wilburn was brought to England by the Normans when they conquered the country in 1066. The ancestors of the Wilburn family lived in Lincolnshire.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English and Middle English name “Wilford,” composed of two elements: “willow” (willow) plus “ford” (stream, a current). In turn, the name means “willow ford, someone who lived near a ford.” Wilford is a village close to the center of the city of Nottingham, UK. The village is bounded to the north and west by the River Trent and the east by the now-closed Great Central Railway embankment.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name comes from the Latin word “cælum > cælestis,” meaning “heavenly, coming from the sky, the blue color of the sky.” The name spread in a Christian context, used concerning the Virgin Mary “Queen Mother in Heaven.” Queen of Heaven (Latin: Regina Caeli) is one of many Queen titles used by the Virgin Mary. The title derived in part from the ancient Catholic teaching that Mary, at the end of her earthly life, was bodily and spiritually assumed into heaven, and that she is there honored as Queen. Saint Celeste Metz was the 2nd Bishop of Metz and is revered as a saint by the Catholic Church, the Orthodox Churches, and the Anglican Communion. Pope Celestine V was the head of the Catholic Church for a few months from 5 July to 13 December 1294 when resigned.
Origin: latin
This name derives from the Hebrew “adamah > ‘âdâm > Adam,” meaning: (Literally: the ground, the earth), (Figurative: man, being human), (Arabic: made from the earth, made from the mud). Adam is a figure in the Book of Genesis, the Quran, and the Kitáb-i-Íqán. In the Genesis creation narratives, he was created by Yahweh-Elohim (Yahweh-God, the god of Israel), though the term “Adam” can refer to both the first person as well as to the general creation of humankind. Christian churches differ on how they view Adam’s subsequent behavior, often called “the fall of man.” Linked to this root, the name “Addison” (son of Adam) was the 14th most common name for girls born in the United States in 2012. Adam is also a surname in many countries, although it is not as common in English as its derivative Adams (sometimes spelled Addams). In other languages, there are similar surnames derived from Adam, such as Adamo, Adamov, Adamowicz, Adamski, etc. According to the United States Social Security card applications in 1984, the name Adam ranked 18th out of the top 100 names chosen by parents for their baby boys.
Origin: hebrew
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.
Origin: latin
This name is composed of two elements: “hēr” (here) or “hær” (hair) plus “hlǣw” (mountain, mound, hill, barrow, cairn). In turn, the ordinary meaning is “a mountain or hill full of trees.” Harlow is a town and local government district in the west of Essex, England. A new town, situated on the border with Hertfordshire and London, Harlow occupies a large land area on the south bank of the upper Stort Valley, which has been made navigable through other towns and features a canal section near its watermill.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Greek “kynthos (Κύνθος) kynthia (Κυνθία),” meaning “woman from Kynthos.” Cynthia was originally an epithet of the Greek goddess of the moon, Artemis, who according to legend, was born on Mount “kynthios,” a mountain on the island of Delos. Selene, the Greek personification of the moon, and the Roman Diana (by way of their identification with Artemis) were also sometimes called “Cynthia.” The English diminutive form “Cindy” also had success as a proper name, making it among the top 100 new-born Americans between 1953 and 1973.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place-name “Wǣringwīċ,” composed of two elements: “wǣr” (dam) plus “wīċ” (fortification, castle, dairy farm). Warwick (Wǣringwīċ) is the county town of Warwickshire, England. The city lies upon the river Avon, 11 miles (18 km) south of Coventry and just west of Leamington Spa and Whitnash with which it is conjoined. Often the name Warwick is associated with the University of Warwick; although it is in the proximity of Warwick, it is located in the territory of the city of Coventry. It is home to Warwick Castle, which is of considerable historical interest. England's Queen Consort Anne Neville was born there in 1456.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Hawaiian “Kaylani,” composed of two elements: “kai” (ocean, sea) plus “lani” (sky, heaven). In turn, the name means “heavenly seas.”
Origin: hawaiian
This name derives from the habitational surname of English origin. It is composed of two elements: from the Old English “longe, long, lang” (long, tall, lasting), from the Proto-Germanic “*langaz” (long) plus “lēah” (woodland, a clearing, a meadow). In turn, the name means “one who lives in a large forest.” Langley is an unincorporated community in the census-designated place of McLean in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States. Langley is often used as a metonym for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), as it is home to its headquarters, the George Bush Center for Intelligence.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place name and surname, from “æsc” (ash) and “lēah” (meadow, forest clearing) “ash-tree wood or clearing.” Ashley was initially used for male children but later gained popularity as a female first name. Her sudden rise in popularity is generally attributed to the emerging female character of the soap opera Ashley Abbott on The Young and The Restless in 1982. In the United Kingdom, the name is used for both boys and girls. Aisling, a similar-sounding name of different etymology and Irish Gaelic origin, is a traditionally female noun meaning “vision” as a feminine spirit and became a popular name for girls early-to-mid the 20th-century. “Ashlyn” and “Ashlynn” are derived from this etymology, and “Ashley” may be back-derived as well. From the 19th-century, both groups of names have mixed, and the different variants are no longer attributable to a specific source.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is composed of two elements: From the Old German “lureln” (murmuring) plus the Celtic term “ley” (rock). In turn, the name means “murmur rock, murmuring rock, luring rock.” Lorelei is a feminine given name taken from the name of a rocky headland on the Rhine River. Legends say that a maiden named the Lorelei lives on the rock and lures fishers to their death with her song. Lorelei is also the name of a feminine water spirit, similar to mermaids or Rhinemaidens, associated with this rock in popular folklore and works of music, art, and literature. The name-day is celebrated on November 1, the Feast of All Saints.
Origin: germanic
This name derives from the Hawaiian “Kaylani,” composed of two elements: “kai” (ocean, sea) plus “lani” (sky, heaven). In turn, the name means “heavenly seas.”
Origin: hawaiian
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) place-name, transferred from the surname. The name is composed of two elements: “prēost” (priest) plus “tūn” (an enclosed piece of ground, settlement, a large inhabited place, a town). The name means “priest town, priest settlement.” Preston is a city and the administrative center of Lancashire, England, located on the River Ribble’s north bank. It is an urban settlement and unparished area that forms the City of Preston local government district of Lancashire when combined with surrounding rural civil parishes.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is of Germanic and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin, composed of two elements: “cyng / cyning”, from the Proto-Germanic “*kuningaz” (king) plus “lēah” (a woodland, a clearing “especially one used for farming”, a meadow). The name means “the king of the forest, king’s wood”. Kingsley is both a surname and a given name. This name increases its popularity thanks to the English actor “Ben Kingsley” (born on December 1943).
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name is of Germanic and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin, composed of two elements: “cyng / cyning”, from the Proto-Germanic “*kuningaz” (king) plus “lēah” (a woodland, a clearing “especially one used for farming”, a meadow). The name means “the king of the forest, king’s wood”. Kingsley is both a surname and a given name. This name increases its popularity thanks to the English actor “Ben Kingsley” (born on December 1943).
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname, composed of two elements: “hamel” from the Proto-Germanic “*hamalaz” (crooked, mutilated, castrated) plus “dūn” (hill, mountain). In turn, the name means “mutilated mountain.” The surname Hamilton probably originated in Hamilton’s village, Leicestershire (which no longer exists), England, but bearers of that name became established in the 13th-century in Lanarkshire, Scotland. A famous bearer of the surname was Alexander Hamilton (1755–1804), a founding father of the United States who was killed in a duel with Aaron Burr.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old High German “Gerlind,” composed of two elements: “*gaizaz” (spear, pike, javelin) plus “lindi / linta” (weak, soft, tender, mild / lime-tree, linden tree / protective shield of linden wood). In turn, the name means “one who protects us with spear and shield.”
Origin: germanic
This name comes from the Latin root “Hadria > Hădrĭānus,” meaning “from the city Hadria,” concerning the modern and ancient city of Atri (province of Teramo) or Etruscan Adria (province of Rovigo), both of which claim the honor of having given its name to the Adriatic Sea. Several saints and six popes have borne this name, including the only English pope, Adrian IV, and the only Dutch pope, Adrian VI. Hadrian (Latin: Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus Augustus 76–138), was Roman Emperor from 117 to 138. He is best known for building Hadrian’s Wall, which marked the northern limit of Roman Britain.
Origin: latin
This name derives from the Old English surname “Bramwell,” composed of two elements: “bram” (broom, gorse) plus “well” (water-source or river). In turn, the name means “brooms on the banks of the river.”
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English surname “Stadford”, meaning “landing-place ford”. The twin villages of East and West Stafford in Dorset have also provided some name-holders. These appear in the Domesday Book simply as “Stanford,” which implies the slightly different meaning of “the stony ford.” Stafford is the county town of Staffordshire, in the West Midlands of England. Stafford is composed of two elements: “staithe” (landing place) plus “ford” (stream). The original settlement was on dry sand and gravel peninsula that provided a strategic crossing point in the River Sow’s marshy valley, a River Trent’s tributary.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name means “angel, messenger, the messenger of God.” Saint Angelus (Italian: Sant’Angelo) (1185–1220) was one of the Carmelite Order’s early members, who suffered martyrdom for the Faith at Leocata, Sicily. The story of his life, as it has come down, is not very reliable. It may be summarized as follows: His parents were Jews of Jerusalem who were converted to Christianity by a vision of our Lady. In Greek mythology, Angelos was a daughter of Zeus, and Hera turned deity of the underworld. Her story only survives in Scholia on Theocritus’ Idyll 2 and is as follows. English names linked to the root Ángelos are in use since the 18th-century. An angel is a supernatural being or spirit, often depicted in humanoid form with feathered wings on their backs and halos around their heads, found in various religions and mythologies. The theological study of angels is known as “angelology.” In the Zoroastrianism and Abrahamic religions, they are represented as heavenly and benevolent beings who act as intermediaries between Heaven and Earth or as guardian spirits as a guiding influence.
Origin: greek
This name is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin, composed of two elements: “twī-” (twin, twice, two, double) plus “lēoht” (light, daylight). In turn, the name means “the half sun waning.” As a given name, it has been in occasional use from the early 20th-century onwards. 1) Twilight on Earth is the illumination of the lower atmosphere when the Sun is not directly visible because it is below the horizon. 2) The Twilight Saga is a series of four vampire-themed fantasy romance novels by American author Stephenie Meyer, as well as three companion novels.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname and place name “Creighton,” composed of two elements: From the Old Irish “crích / críoch” (end, boundary, limit, region, territory) plus the Old English “tūn” (a farm, a hamlet, town). In turn, the name means “border town.” Mount Creighton is a mountain about 3 nautical miles (6 km) east-northeast of Mount Gavaghan in the Porthos Range of the Prince Charles Mountains.
Origin: old english (anglo-saxon)
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Spártē (Σπᾰ́ρτη) Spártakos (Σπάρτακος),” meaning “rope, cord made from Spartos, a type of broom, from the city of Sparta.” Spartacus was a Thracian gladiator, who, along with the Gauls Crixus, Oenomaus, Castus, and Gannicus, was one of the slave leaders in the Third Servile War, a major slave uprising against the Roman Republic. The name Spartacus is otherwise attested in the Black Sea region: kings of the Thracian dynasty of the Cimmerian Bosporus and Pontus are known to have borne it, and a Thracian “Sparta, Spardacus or Sparadokos,” father of Seuthes I of the Odrysae, is also known.
Origin: attic greek
This name derives from the Old Norse “Eyjólfr and Eyiólfr,” composed of two elements: “*awiō > ey” (island, meadow, floodplain, water, stream, river) plus “ulfr” (wolf). In turn, the name means “the wolf of the plains, the wolf of the islands.” Often the element “ey,” as well as connected to various Germanic elements, is linked to the Old Norse “auja,” which means “gift, luck, fortune.”
Origin: old norse
This name is linked to “lugus” a deity of the Celtic pantheon, from the Proto Indo-European root: “leug- > lug- > lugus.” His name is rarely directly attested in inscriptions, but his importance can be inferred from place names and ethnonyms. His nature and attributes are deduced from the distinctive iconography of Gallo-Roman inscriptions to Mercury, who is widely believed to have been identified with Lugus, and from the mythological narratives involving his later cognates, Irish Lugh Lámhfhada (long arm or longhand) and Welsh Lleu Llaw Gyffes (Lleu of the skillful hand).
Origin: pie (proto indo-european)
This name derives from the Old Norse “Eyjólfr and Eyiólfr,” composed of two elements: “*awiō > ey” (island, meadow, floodplain, water, stream, river) plus “ulfr” (wolf). In turn, the name means “the wolf of the plains, the wolf of the islands.” Often the element “ey,” as well as connected to various Germanic elements, is linked to the Old Norse “auja,” which means “gift, luck, fortune.”
Origin: old norse
This name derives from the Old Norse “Eyjólfr and Eyiólfr,” composed of two elements: “*awiō > ey” (island, meadow, floodplain, water, stream, river) plus “ulfr” (wolf). In turn, the name means “the wolf of the plains, the wolf of the islands.” Often the element “ey,” as well as connected to various Germanic elements, is linked to the Old Norse “auja,” which means “gift, luck, fortune.”
Origin: old norse
This name derives from the Egyptian hieroglyphs “ḥr.w / Haruw,” (Ancient Greek: Hôros ‘Ὧρος’) meaning “falcon.” Additional meanings are thought to have been “the distant one” or “one who is above, over.” Horus in Ancient Egyptian is one of the most significant ancient Egyptian deities who served many functions, most notably god of kingship and the sky. He was worshipped from at least the late prehistoric Egypt until the Ptolemaic Kingdom and Roman Egypt.
Origin: ancient egyptian
This name has several possible derivations, including: 1) name Invented by linguist Yrjö Karilas for his daughter in 1917 from the Finnish “seijas,” meaning “tranquil, serene.” 2) Finnish form of “Zeia,” Old High German diminutive form of “Luzei” which in turn derives from the Latin “lūx > lūcis > lucere (lūcĕo) > lūcĭus,” meaning “light, shine, clear, bright, shining, full of light.” 3) from the Roman goddess Seia that protects the seed once sown in the earth.
Origin: latin
Morrissey is mostly a surname but is rarely used as a first name as well. This name comes from the Irish surname “Ó Muirgheasa,” which means “son of Muirgheas, Sea-choice.”
Origin: irish (gaelic)
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.
Origin: greek
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.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Germanic element “iv,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Germanic “*īhwaz” (yew ‘tree’). Ivo is the Latinized form of a medieval name of Old French origin, Cognate with modern French Yves. Saint Ivo of Kermartin was a parish priest among the poor of Louannec, the only one of his station to be canonized in the Middle Ages. He is the patron of Brittany, lawyers, and abandoned children. His feast day is May 19. Poetically, he is referred to as “Advocate of the Poor.” Ivo could also be correlated with the Celtic “Ivo,” one of the ancient Celts sacred trees.
Origin: germanic
This name derives from the Old Norse element “askr,” meaning “ash tree.” In Norse mythology, Ask, and Embla (Old Norse: Askr ok Embla), male and female respectively were the first two humans, created by the gods. The pair is attested in both the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th-century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson. In both sources, three gods, one of whom is Odin, find Ask and Embla and bestow upon them various corporeal and spiritual gifts.
Origin: old norse
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Koîos (Κόιος),” a titan of intellect and the axis of heaven around which the constellations revolved. In Greek mythology, Coeus (Ancient Greek: Koios) was one of the Titans, the giant sons and daughters of Uranus (heaven) and Gaia (earth). Though he scarcely makes an appearance in Roman mythology, his equivalent in Latin poetry was Polus, the embodiment of the celestial axis around which the heavens revolve.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the African (Akan Ashanti) (Èʋe) “Ya,” meaning “born on Thursday (Yáwóada), linked to the earth.” The Akan and Ewe people frequently name their children after the day of the week they were born. These names have spread throughout Ghana and Jamaica. For example, in Jamaica, the following day names have been recorded: Monday, Cudjoe; Tuesday, Cubbenah; Wednesday, Quaco; Thursday, Quao; Friday, Cuffee; Saturday, Quamin; Sunday, Quashee. The Akwasidae festival is celebrated by the Ashanti people and chiefs in Ashanti, as well as the Ashanti diaspora. The festival is celebrated on a Sunday, once every six weeks, and the Akwasidae Festival is next only in importance to the national day celebrations.
Origin: african (akan ashanti)
This name derives from the African (Akan Ashanti) (Èʋe) “Ya,” meaning “born on Thursday (Yáwóada), linked to the earth.” The Akan and Ewe people frequently name their children after the day of the week they were born. These names have spread throughout Ghana and Jamaica. For example, in Jamaica, the following day names have been recorded: Monday, Cudjoe; Tuesday, Cubbenah; Wednesday, Quaco; Thursday, Quao; Friday, Cuffee; Saturday, Quamin; Sunday, Quashee. The Akwasidae festival is celebrated by the Ashanti people and chiefs in Ashanti, as well as the Ashanti diaspora. The festival is celebrated on a Sunday, once every six weeks, and the Akwasidae Festival is next only in importance to the national day celebrations.
Origin: african (akan ashanti)
This name derives from the African (Akan Ashanti) (Èʋe) “Ya,” meaning “born on Thursday (Yáwóada), linked to the earth.” The Akan and Ewe people frequently name their children after the day of the week they were born. These names have spread throughout Ghana and Jamaica. For example, in Jamaica, the following day names have been recorded: Monday, Cudjoe; Tuesday, Cubbenah; Wednesday, Quaco; Thursday, Quao; Friday, Cuffee; Saturday, Quamin; Sunday, Quashee. The Akwasidae festival is celebrated by the Ashanti people and chiefs in Ashanti, as well as the Ashanti diaspora. The festival is celebrated on a Sunday, once every six weeks, and the Akwasidae Festival is next only in importance to the national day celebrations.
Origin: african (akan ashanti)
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.
Origin: latin
This name derives from the Proto-Norse “*AʒilaR,” which in turn derives from the Ancient Germanic “*agi- / *agaz,” meaning “awe, terror, fear, dread,” or from the Ancient Germanic “*agi,ō,” meaning “edge, corner, sharpness (of a weapon), sword” (Proto-Germanic “*Agilaz”). Egil is a legendary hero of the Völundarkviða and the Thidreks saga. The name is from Proto-Germanic *Agilaz, and the same legend is reflected in Old English Ægil of the Franks Casket and Alamannic Aigil of the Pforzen buckle. The Proto-Germanic form of the myth may only be guessed. Still, it appears likely that Egil was a renowned archer who defended a keep together with his wife Aliruna, against numerous attackers. The testimony of the Pforzen buckle is uncertain beyond naming Aigil and Ailrun, possibly adding that they fought a battle at the river Ilz.
Origin: germanic
This name derives from the Hebrew “Ahărōn,” meaning “high mountain, a mountain of strength, enlightened or elevated, exalted,” which is most likely of Ancient Egyptian origin from “aha rw,” meaning “warrior lion.” Aaron, the Priest, was The elder brother of Moses in the Book of the Exodus and the Quran. He represented the priestly functions of his tribe, becoming the first High Priest of the Israelites. The name was exclusively Jewish in the Middle Ages, taken up by Gentiles in the 17th-century, and popular among both towards the end of the 20th-century.
Origin: hebrew
This name derives from the Old Norse “Víðarr.” The theories include: 1) Name composed of two elements: “víðr” (wide, broad, extensive), from the Proto-Norse “*wīda-“(wide) plus “*hariaR” (warrior, leader of an army). 2) Name composed of two elements: “*wiðu-” (forest as a borderline), plus “*hariaR” (warrior, leader of an army). In Norse mythology, Víðarr (Old Norse, possibly “wide ruler,” sometimes anglicized as Vidar, Vithar, Vidarr, and Vitharr), is a god among the Æsir associated with a vengeance. Víðarr is described as the son of Odin and the jötunn Gríðr and is foretold to avenge his father’s death by killing the wolf Fenrir at Ragnarök, a conflict which he is described as surviving.
Origin: old norse
This name derives from Latin “aurōra,” which in turn derives from Pie (Proto Indo-European) “*aus- / *aues,” meaning “down, shine, shed light, east, the eastern peoples (used to wish the beauty and brightness of dawn).” In Roman mythology, Aurora, goddess of the dawn, renews herself every morning and flies across the sky, announcing the arrival of the sun. Her parentage was flexible: for Ovid, she could equally be Pallantis, signifying the daughter of Pallas, or the daughter of Hyperion. She has two siblings, a brother (Sol, the sun) and a sister (Luna, the moon). Rarely, Roman writers imitated Hesiod and later Greek poets and named Aurora as the mother of the Anemoi (the Winds), who were the offspring of Astraeus, the father of the stars.
Origin: latin
This name comes from the Latin root “Hadria > Hădrĭānus,” meaning “from the city Hadria,” concerning the modern and ancient city of Atri (province of Teramo) or Etruscan Adria (province of Rovigo), both of which claim the honor of having given its name to the Adriatic Sea. Several saints and six popes have borne this name, including the only English pope, Adrian IV, and the only Dutch pope, Adrian VI. Hadrian (Latin: Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus Augustus 76–138), was Roman Emperor from 117 to 138. He is best known for building Hadrian’s Wall, which marked the northern limit of Roman Britain.
Origin: latin
A male given name transferred from the surname. The name comes from the Scottish (Gaelic) river, running through Glasgow, which in turn comes from the Gaelic “caol abhainn” (narrow water).
Origin: scottish (gaelic)
This name derives from the Old Norse “sif,” meaning “wife, bride,” singular form of the plural “sifjar,” meaning “affinity, connexion by marriage.” In Norse mythology, Sif is a goddess associated with earth. Sif is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th-century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda, written in the 13th-century by Snorri Sturluson the poetry of skalds. Sifjar is cognate to the Old English “sib” (affinity, connection, by marriage) and in other Germanic languages: Gothic language “sibja,” Old High German “sibba,” and German “Sippe.” Sifjar appears not only in ancient poetry and records of law but also in compounds “byggja sifjar,” meaning “to marry.”
Origin: old norse
This name derives from the Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Greek root “Îsis (Ἶσις) Ísida (Ίσιδα) dôron (δῶρον),” meaning “gift of Isis.” Isis was the goddess of magic, and she is the most powerful of goddesses in Ancient Egyptian religion, and whose worship also spread throughout the Greco-Roman world. She was worshipped as the ideal mother and wife as well as the patron of nature and magic. Saint Isidore of Seville (Spanish: San Isidro or San Isidoro de Sevilla, Latin: Isidorus Hispalensis) (~560–636) served as Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades and is considered, as the historian Montalembert put it in an oft-quoted phrase, “the last scholar of the ancient world.”
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “pûr (πῦρ) (Greek; pyr ‘πυρ’ / Old English; fȳr / English; fire),” meaning “fire, blaze.” In Greek mythology, Pyrrhus is the nickname given to the hero Neoptolemus, while Pyrrha was the wife of Deucalion, who, with her husband, helped to repopulate the earth after the Flood. Pyrrhus was a Greek general and statesman of the Hellenistic period. He was king of the Greek tribe of Molossians, of the royal Aeacid house (from ~297 BC), and later he became king of Epirus (~306–302, 297–272 BC).
Origin: greek
The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) Maybe from Yuri a diminutive form of “Georgiy, Yegor,” from the Ancient Greek name “Geṓrgios (Γεώργιος),” 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.” 2) It may be of Persian origin. Saint Gurias, Archbishop of Kazan (Russian: Guriy, secular name Grigory Grigorievich Rougotin), died the 5 of December of 1563, was the first archbishop of the Kazan diocese, established in 1555. He was born in the town of Radonezh outside Moscow into the family of a courtier. His parents were not wealthy, and so from his early years, he had to serve Prince Ivan Penkov as the steward of his estates.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Ancient Greek name “Apollōníā (Ἀπολλωνίᾱ), which in turn derives from “Apóllōn (Ᾰ̓πόλλων).” Apollo is one of the most important and complex of the Olympian deities in ancient Greek and Roman religion and mythology. 1) Apollonia was an ancient Greek city in Illyria, located on the right bank of the Aous river (modern-day Vjosë). Its ruins are situated in the Fier region, near the village of Pojani, in modern-day Albania. 2) Saint Apollonia was one of a group of virgin martyrs who suffered in Alexandria during a local uprising against the Christians before the persecution of Decius.
Origin: greek
Sky is both a surname and a given name and derives from “Skye” or “the Isle of Skye,” the largest and most northerly large island in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland. Skye is also a variant of Sky, which derives from the Germanic and Old Norse “*skiwją / *skiwô > ský,” meaning “a cloud, cloud, cloud cover.”
Origin: scottish (gaelic)
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Nýx (Νύξ),” which in turn derives from “núx (νῠ́ξ)“ meaning “night.” In Greek mythology, Nýx is the Greek goddess (or personification) of the night. A shadowy figure, Nyx stood at or near the beginning of creation and mothered other personified deities such as Hypnos (Sleep) and Thanatos (Death), with Erebus (Darkness). In 1997, the International Astronomical Union approved Nyx's name for a mountain/peak on the planet Venus.
Origin: greek
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.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Hḗrōs (ἥρως) Hērṓ (Ἡρώ) Hērōn (Ἥρων),” meaning “hero.” Hero of Alexandria, also known as Heron of Alexandria, was a mathematician and engineer who was active in his native city of Alexandria, Roman Egypt. He is considered the greatest experimenter of antiquity, and his work is representative of the Hellenistic scientific tradition. Iró (Ηρώ) is a Greek name that refers to a famous priestess of Afrodite, known for her beauty. Iro is one of the rare, ancient names celebrated in the Greek Orthodox calendar, although not referring to a saint. She fell in love with a young man named (Greek: Léandros “Λέανδροσ”), who lived on the other side of the sea. The name is also a character in William Shakespeare’s 1599 play “Much Ado About Nothing.”
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Nýx (Νύξ),” which in turn derives from “núx (νῠ́ξ)“ meaning “night.” In Greek mythology, Nýx is the Greek goddess (or personification) of the night. A shadowy figure, Nyx stood at or near the beginning of creation and mothered other personified deities such as Hypnos (Sleep) and Thanatos (Death), with Erebus (Darkness). In 1997, the International Astronomical Union approved Nyx's name for a mountain/peak on the planet Venus.
Origin: greek
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.
Origin: greek
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.
Origin: greek
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Aiakós (Αἰακός).” Aiakos was one of three judges of the dead, underworld demi-god. He was a son of Zeus and a daughter of the river-god Asopus, who were granted their position after death as a reward for the establishment of law on earth.
Origin: greek
Names that mean nature carry special significance across many cultures. These names are often chosen by parents who wish to instill qualities of Connected to the natural world in their children. Whether you're looking for a traditional name with deep historical roots or a modern name with contemporary appeal, this collection offers diverse options for your baby.
Each name in this collection has been carefully researched to ensure authentic meanings and origins. Browse by gender to find the perfect nature name for your baby boy or girl, or explore all names to discover unique options that transcend traditional gender categories.