Browse names
172 names match.
Greek
Weaver.
English
Young servant or attendant.
Scottish
Church, cemetery.
English
Pipe player.
English
Priest's meadow.
Greek
purse.
Greek
Bright, pure.
Greek
Weaver; faithful wife.
Greek
Bringer of destruction; goddess of spring.
Latin
Ancient, venerable.
English
A solemn pledge.
Latin
Small.
Latin
Noble, patrician.
Scottish
Church; the swirled paisley pattern.
Latin/Spanish
Pearl.
English
Fighter; from the warrior's town.
Latin
Small, humble.
English
Pilgrim, one who has returned from the Holy Land with a palm branch.
English
Church or place of worship.
Latin
Small, humble.
Latin
A smooth, lustrous, typically rounded gemstone formed within the shells of mollusks, especially oysters.
English
A type of flower, also associated with remembrance.
French
Female member of a royal family, especially a daughter or granddaughter of a king or queen.
Greek/Latin
All sweetness, honey.
Spanish
Dove
English, from the French
Of great value; not to be wasted or treated carelessly.
Latin
The quality of being patient, as the bearing of provocation, annoyance, misfortune, or pain, without complaint, loss of temper, irritation, or the like.
Greek
Green bough; foliage.
English
Pearl.
French
Small; humble.
Latin
Diminutive of Patricia, meaning noblewoman.
English (diminutive of Patrick/Patricia, from Latin)
Short form of Patrick or Patricia, from the Latin patricius meaning nobleman.
English (diminutive of Patricia, from Latin)
Diminutive of Patricia, from the Latin patricius meaning noblewoman.
French
A feminine diminutive of Paul, meaning small or humble.
English
A diminutive of Patricia, from Latin meaning noblewoman.
French
A French form of Patrick or Patricia, from the Latin patricius, meaning noble or patrician.
English/Greek
A short form of Pamela, a literary name coined by poet Philip Sidney, possibly meaning all sweetness from Greek pan and meli.
English
Diminutive of Mary or Paulina, meaning star of the sea or small.
Latin
Variant of Pearl, from Latin perla meaning a pearl jewel.
Greek
From petra, meaning stone or rock.
French
From the English flower name, derived from French pensée, meaning thought.
Latin
Derived from portia, possibly from the Roman Porcia family.
Latin via English
Noblewoman of patrician rank.
Greek
Lover of strength, devoted warrior.
Latin
Noblewoman, of patrician rank.
Greek
All honey, entirely sweet; variant of Pamela from Greek 'pan' and 'meli'.
Greek
Pearl, precious gem; variant of Peggy from Margaret.
Latin
Pearl; from the precious gem.