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179 names in our directory
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179Olivera is a feminine given name primarily used in Croatian, Macedonian, and Serbian, formed as a feminine equivalent of the male name Oliver. The name Oliver itself has a complex etymology, potentially derived from Lati...
Paraskeva is the Bulgarian and Macedonian form of Paraskeve.EtymologyThe name Paraskeva derives from the Greek word paraskeue, meaning "preparation" or "Friday" (the day of preparation before the Sabbath). This root name...
Pavlina is a feminine given name used in Bulgarian, Macedonian, Greek, and Slovene-speaking regions. It is a form of Paulina, which itself derives from the Roman family name Paulinus, ultimately based on Paul, meaning 's...
Radmila is a feminine given name widely used in Serbia, Croatia, Macedonia, Czech Republic, and other Slavic regions. It is the feminine form of Radomil, derived from the Slavic elements radŭ meaning "happy, willing" and...
Rosa 2 is a feminine given name used in South Slavic languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian, and Serbian. Unlike the more widely known name Rosa derived from the Latin word for "rose," this name has a disti...
Roza is a feminine given name that means "rose" in Russian, Bulgarian, and Macedonian. It is a cognate of Rosa, sharing the same floral derivation. The name ultimately stems from Latin rosa, but its use in Slavic languag...
Rozalija is a feminine given name used in Croatian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, and Slovene, serving as a form of the Late Latin name Rosalia. Rosalia ultimately derives from rosa meaning "rose," a flower that symbolizes lov...
Rumena is a feminine given name used primarily in Bulgarian and Macedonian. It is the feminine form of Rumen, which derives from the South Slavic word meaning "ruddy, rosy." The name evokes a healthy, rosy complexion, a...
Ruža is a feminine given name used in Croatia, Serbia, and North Macedonia, meaning "rose" in Croatian, Serbian, and Macedonian. It is a cognate of Rosa 1, ultimately derived from Latin rosa meaning "rose. In Macedonian,...
Ruža is a name meaning 'rose' in several South Slavic languages, including Croatian, Serbian, and Macedonian. It is a cognate of the Latin name Rosa 1, which derives from the Latin word for 'rose'. In Macedonian, the nam...
Sandra is a female given name used widely across European languages and the English-speaking world. It originated as a short form of Alessandra, the Italian feminine form of Alessandro (Alexander). Through its connection...
Sara is a feminine given name used in many languages around the world, derived from Sarah. The name ultimately comes from the Hebrew שָׂרָה (Sara), meaning "lady, princess, noblewoman". In the Old Testament, Sarah is the...
Sashka is a Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine given name, functioning as a diminutive of Aleksandra. In Macedonian, it may also be transcribed from the Cyrillic Сашка, equivalent to Saška. The name shares its roots with...
Saška is a feminine Diminutive of Aleksandra, used primarily in Macedonian and Slovene. The name evokes affection and familiarity, much like related forms such as Saša (Slovene) and Sashka (Macedonian). Etymology and Ori...
Silvija is a feminine given name used in Croatian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Slovene. It is a form of the name Silvia, which itself derives from the Latin silva meaning 'forest' or 'woodland'. Silvija...
Simona is a feminine form of Simon 1, used in several European languages including Bulgarian, Czech, Italian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Romanian, Slovak, and Slovene.EtymologySimona derives from the masculine name Simon, w...
Slavica is a feminine given name originating in the South Slavic linguistic area, where it is used as a hypocoristic form of compounds built around the Slavic element slava meaning "glory". The core element slava itself...
Slavka is a feminine given name used across several South Slavic and West Slavic languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Slovene. It is the feminine form of Slavko, which originated as a diminu...
Snežana is a feminine given name of South Slavic origin, popular in North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia. It is the Macedonian, Serbian, and Slovene form of Snježana, which is derived from the Serbo-Croatian word snežan...
Snezhana is a feminine given name used primarily in Russian, Bulgarian, and Macedonian contexts. It is a variant of the name Snježana, which derives from the Serbo-Croatian word snežan meaning "snowy." The spelling Snezh...
Sofija is a feminine given name used in several South Slavic and East Baltic languages, equivalent to Sophia. The name directly derives from the Greek word sophia, meaning "wisdom", and is common in Croatian, Latvian, Li...
Etymology and OriginSonja is a given name used across Sonya in several European languages, predominantly in Scandinavia, Central Europe, and the Balkans. It was borrowed directly from the Russian diminutive Sonya, which...
Stefanija is a feminine given name used in Lithuanian and Macedonian, derived as a feminine form of Stephen. The Lithuanian usage aligns with other Baltic adaptations of Christian names, while in Macedonia it follows the...
Suzana is the form of Susan in several languages, including Albanian, Croatian, Macedonian, Portuguese, Serbian, and Slovene. It ultimately derives from the Hebrew name Susanna, which originates from the Hebrew word שׁוֹ...
Svetlana is a feminine given name of Russian origin, derived from the Slavic root svet meaning "light, world". Despite its widespread use across Slavic countries, the name is not of ancient Slavic origin. It was coined b...
Tamara is a feminine given name that serves as the Russian form of Tamar. The name Tamar comes from Hebrew and Arabic, meaning "palm tree" or "date fruit," derived from the common Arabic word tamr (تَمْر), with tamra (تَ...
OverviewTanja is a feminine given name used across several European countries, including Croatia, Denmark, the Netherlands, Finland, Germany, Macedonia, Norway, Serbia, Slovenia, and Sweden. It is a variant of Tanya, whi...
Etymology and OriginTatjana is a form of Tatiana used in several languages, including Croatian, Estonian, Finnish, German, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Slovene. In some cases, it derives from the Russian...
Teodora is a feminine given name used across multiple European languages, including Bulgarian, Italian, Macedonian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Spanish, and Swedish. It is the feminine form of the Greek name T...
Teodosija is the Serbian and Macedonian form of Theodosia, a name with deep historical roots. Theodosia itself is the feminine form of Theodosius, a Latinized version of the Greek name Theodosios (Θεοδόσιος), which means...
Tina is a feminine given name derived as a short form of Christina, Martina, and other names ending in tina. It is widely used across many languages and cultures, including Georgian, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, English, Ger...
Todorka is a Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine form of Theodore, a name of Greek origin meaning "gift of god." The name Theodore derives from the Greek elements theos ("god") and doron ("gift"), and its feminine counterp...
Etymology and MeaningTrajanka is the feminine form of the Macedonian masculine name Trajan 2, derived from Trajan 1, the Roman emperor's name. The root of the name is the South Slavic word traj, meaning 'to last, to endu...
Trena is a feminine short form that cuts directly to the heart of the Macedonian name Trendafilka. Where Trendafilka builds from the floral root “trendafil” (rose), Trena is a clipped, familiar variant—a nickname that be...
Trendafilka is a feminine given name used in Macedonia, derived from the Macedonian word трендафил (trendafil), meaning "rose." This word itself traces its origins to the Greek name Triantafyllos, which combines the elem...
Valentina is a feminine given name with widespread use across Europe and the Americas, particularly in Italian, Spanish, Russian, Greek, and Slavic languages. It is the feminine form of the Roman name Valentinus, which i...
Vana is a feminine Macedonian short form of Ivana or Jovana. These names themselves are feminine derivatives of the masculine names Ivan and Jovan, respectively, which are South Slavic forms of the name John.Etymology an...
Vangelija is a Macedonian short form of the name Evangelija, derived from the Greek name Evangelos, meaning "bringing good news" from two Greek elements: εὖ (eu) "good" and ἄγγελος (angelos) "messenger." By virtue of its...
Varvara is a feminine given name used in Bulgarian, Greek, Macedonian, and Russian, where it functions as the local form of Barbara. The name ultimately derives from the Greek word βάρβαρος (barbaros), meaning "foreign"...
Etymology and MeaningVasa is a short form of the name Vasilija, the Macedonian feminine form of Basil 1. The root name Basil ultimately derives from the Greek Basileios, meaning "royal" or "kingly", from the word basileu...
Vasilija is a Serbian and Macedonian feminine given name, derived as the feminine form of Basil 1. The name ultimately originates from the Greek Basileios, meaning "royal" or "kingly," itself from basileus ("king"). It i...
Origin and MeaningVasilka is a Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine diminutive of Basil 1. The root name Basil comes from the Greek name Basileios, meaning "royal, kingly," derived from basileus ("king"). This association w...
Vera is a feminine given name widely used across multiple languages and cultures. In Russian, it means "faith" (from the word вера), while it is also often associated with the Latin adjective verus, meaning "true." This...
Etymology Veronika is the form of Veronica used across many languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, German, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Russian, Slovak, Slovene, Swed...
Vesna is a Slavic feminine given name, meaning "spring" in many Slavic languages. It is directly derived from Vesna, an ancient Slavic goddess of spring and renewal. The name became popular as a personal name only in the...
Veta is a feminine Macedonian short form of Elisaveta, which itself derives from Elizabeth. The root name Elizabeth comes from the Hebrew ʾElishevaʿ, meaning "my God is an oath," composed of the elements ʾel (God) and sh...
Viktorija is a feminine given name, a variant of Victoria in several languages. It is derived from the Latin word victoria, meaning "victory." The name is used in Croatian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Serbian, and S...
Violeta is a female given name used across several European languages, including Spanish, Romanian, Bulgarian, Albanian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, and Serbian. It is the form of the English name Violet in these languages,...
Zaharina is the Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine form of Zechariah. The name derives from the Hebrew root meaning "Yahweh remembers," with Zechariah being the name of a major biblical prophet and the father of John the...
Zaharinka is a Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine name that functions as a diminutive of Zaharina.Etymology and MeaningThe name Zaharinka ultimately derives from the Hebrew name Zechariah (Zeḵarya), meaning "Yahweh rememb...
Žaklina is the Macedonian, Croatian and Serbian form of Jacqueline, a name with a rich etymological history reaching back to the Hebrew origin of James. Through the French feminine form Jacqueline, itself a derivation of...
Zhaklina is the Bulgarian form of Jacqueline, as well as an alternate transcription of Macedonian Жаклина (see Žaklina). This name joins a long chain that traces back through French to the Hebrew name Jacob, born from Bi...
Zhivka is a Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine given name, derived from the South Slavic root živ, meaning “alive, living.” As the feminine form of Živko, it belongs to a family of names that celebrate vitality and life,...
Živka is a feminine given name used predominantly in South Slavic cultures, particularly in Croatia, Macedonia, and Serbia. It functions as the feminine form of the masculine name Živko. Etymology and Linguistic Roots Th...
Zlata is a feminine given name of South Slavic origin, primarily used in countries such as Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine. It is the feminine form of Zlatan,...
Zoja is a feminine given name used in several Central and Eastern European languages, including Croatian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Polish, Serbian, and Slovene. It is a local form of the name Zoe, which means "li...
Zora is a feminine given name of Slavic origin, directly derived from the word zora, meaning "dawn" or "aurora" in several Slavic languages, including Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Czech, Slovak, and Slovene....
Zorica (Cyrillic: Зорица) is a feminine given name used in Serbia, Croatia, Macedonia, and other South Slavic countries. It is a diminutive of Zora, which means "dawn" or "aurora" in South Slavic languages, as well as in...
Zorka is a feminine name used across several Slavic countries, primarily Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Serbia, Slovakia, and Slovenia. It functions as a diminutive of Zora, a name that means "dawn, aurora...