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Names starting with O

223 Names found

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A variation of Oakley.

An exclusively feminine variation of Oakley.

A variation of Oakley with the suffix lyn.

A variation of Oaklyn.

A Romanian shortened form of Ioana.

From Breton oan "lamb" (from Latin agnus), used as a Breton form of Agnes.

Of unknown meaning. A saint from Toledo, Spain bore this name, though details of her life are unknown.

From the English word ocean for a large body of water, ultimately from Greek Ὠκεανός (Okeanos).

From French océan "ocean".

A variation of Océane.

The Portuguese variant of Octavia.

The female form of Octavius. Octavia was the wife of Mark Antony and sister of Emperor Augustus. In 19th-century England, it was sometimes given to...

The French variant of Octavia.

From the tenth month's name, from Latin octo "eight", because it was originally the eighth month of the Roman year.

The female form of Otto. A semi-legendary 8th-century saint who lived as a hermit in Brabant bore this name.

Possibly an elaborated form of Odilia used in Latin America. It is typically feminine, but in the Dominican Republic it is commonly masculine.

A variation of Odalis.

A Ukrainian variation of Dariya.

The Old Irish form of Odharnait.

From Old Norse Oddbjǫrg, from oddr "point of a sword" and bjǫrg "help, salvation".

The Old Norse form of Oddbjørg.

The Norwegian variant of Oddný.

From Old Norse oddr "point of a sword" and nýr "new".

From Old Norse oddr "point of a sword" and rún "secret lore, rune". A woman in the Old Norse poem Oddrúnargrátr in the Poetic Edda bears this name.

The Norwegian variant of Oddrún.

From Old Norse oddr "point of a sword" and veig "strength". Coined in the 19th century [1].

Signifies "I will thank Yahweh" in Hebrew. A modern Hebrew name probably inspired by Odelia 1.

From the name of a Ukrainian city on the Black Sea's north coast, named after the ancient Greek city Ὀδησσός (Odessos) of uncertain meaning. It can...

The Lithuanian variant of Odette.

The Portuguese variant of Odette.

The Hungarian variant of Odette.

A Latinate form of Odette.

A French diminutive of Oda or Odilia. In Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake (1877), this is a princess transformed into a swan.

From odar "dun-coloured, greyish brown, tan" with a diminutive suffix. An early Irish saint bore this name.

The Old German form of Odilia.

The French variant of Odilia.

From Old German uodil "heritage" or ot "wealth, fortune". Saint Odilia (or Odila) was an 8th-century nun and patron saint of Alsace. She was...

A variation of Odilia.

From од (od) "star" and чимэг (chimeg) "ornament, decoration".

The Latvian variant of Audrey.

Signifies "star flower" in Mongolian, from од (od) "star" and цэцэг (tsetseg) "flower".

The Old Irish form of Aoibheann.

Latinized form of Greek Οἰνώνη (Oinone), from οἶνος (oinos) "wine". In Greek mythology, Oenone was a mountain nymph married to Paris before he...

Signifies "love" in Tongan.

The Portuguese variant of Ophelia.

The Spanish and Italian variant of Ophelia.

The Azerbaijani, Russian, Ukrainian, and Bulgarian variant of Ophelia.

The female form of Ofir.

Signifies "fawn" in Hebrew.

The masculine biblical name Ophrah shares the same root.

Signifies "my fawn" in Hebrew.

Signifies "God's time" in Igbo.

Signifies "God's time" in Igbo (a variation of Ogechi using Chukwu as the second element).

Signifies "God's time is greater" in Igbo.

A Macedonian feminine variant of Ognyan.

The female form of Ognyan.

Signifies "favour of God" in Igbo.

A form of Aholibamah used in some Old Testament versions (the vowel sign can be read both ways).

The Hebrew variant of Oholibamah.

From Estonian õis meaning "flower".