| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laurynas | From Laurentum; laurelled, crowned with laurel | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Lietuvių | Genitive plural of Lietuviai - 'of the Lithuanians' / 'Lithuanians' | Lithuanian | Unisex | — | |
| Linas | Flax; 'flaxen-haired' or 'of flax' | Latvian, Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Liudvika | Famous warrior | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Liudvikaite | Famous warrior / famous in battle | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Liudvikiene | Married-woman form of Liudvikas; ultimately 'famous/noble in battle' (renowned warrior) | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Liudvikiute | 'famous warrior' / 'famous in battle' | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Līnė | Derived from Lina, from Lithuanian 'linas' meaning 'flax' or 'linen'. | Lithuanian, Scandinavian | Girl | — | |
| Līnėnaitė | Originally a patronymic/diminutive meaning "daughter of Lina"; Lina in Lithuanian is associated with "linas" (flax). | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Līnėnė | Diminutive of Lina - 'little Lina' (Lina can mean 'flax' in Lithuanian or be linked to Helena, 'light') | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Maksimilijonas | Derived from Latin 'Maximilianus' / 'Maximus' meaning 'greatest' | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Marijus | Lithuanian form of Marius - originally a Roman family name possibly connected to the god Mars; generally interpreted as 'male' or 'virile'. | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Mariukė | Diminutive of Maria - 'little Mary' (Maria/Mary, traditionally associated with meanings such as 'beloved' or 'sea of bitterness') | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Mariulė | Diminutive of Maria (Mary); ultimately from Hebrew Miryam, often interpreted as "beloved" or "bitter". | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Mariutė | Diminutive of Maria; ultimately from Hebrew Miriam - commonly rendered as 'bitter' or 'beloved' (e.g., 'sea of bitterness'). | Latin, Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Martynas | Dedicated to Mars; warlike | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Martynos | Of Mars; warlike | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Maryte | Lithuanian diminutive of Maria/Marija; name rooted in Hebrew Miryam, often interpreted as 'bitter' or 'beloved/wished-for child'. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Maximilijonas | Derived from Latin 'Maximus', meaning 'greatest'. | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Medeina | Name of a Lithuanian forest goddess - associated with the forest, wild animals, and nature | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Meile | Love, affection | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Militė | Ambiguous - "beloved/dear" or "soldier" | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Milutė | Little beloved / dear little one | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Mindaugas | From Lithuanian minti 'to think' + daug 'much' - 'much-thinking', 'great thinker' or 'very thoughtful' | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Modeste | Humble, moderate, modest | Latin, Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Myrtėlė | Myrtle (evergreen shrub); traditionally associated with love, beauty and immortality | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Neringa | Refers to the Curonian Spit - 'sand spit' or 'dune'; also linked to the mythical guardian Neringa | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Neris | Named after the Neris River - associated with flowing water/river | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijole | Lithuanian feminine name; etymology uncertain (modern/local name) | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėkaitienė | A married woman's surname meaning 'wife/descendant of Nijolė' (derived from the female name Nijolė). | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėkaitė | Diminutive/patronymic meaning 'daughter (or descendant) of Nijolė' (formed with the feminine suffix -aitė). | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėle | Affectionate diminutive of Nijolė - literally 'little Nijolė' (pet name). The root name Nijolė has an obscure/uncertain origin. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėnaitienė | A married-woman surname meaning 'woman of/connected to Nijolė' (i.e., wife or female member of a Nijolė family). | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėnaitė | Daughter (female descendant) of Nijolė - a matronymic/diminutive form | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėnienė | A married woman's Lithuanian surname meaning 'wife of (someone named) Nijolėnas' - derived from the feminine given name Nijolė, a modern Lithuanian name of uncertain origin. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėnė | Uncertain - a Lithuanian feminine name of Baltic origin with no widely agreed etymology. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėta | Derived from the Lithuanian name Nijolė; meaning uncertain - likely a modern Lithuanian coinage or variant without a clear ancient meaning. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėtaitienė | Married woman's surname meaning "wife of Nijolėtaitis", ultimately derived from the feminine given name Nijolė. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėtaitė | A feminine surname form meaning "daughter of Nijolė," derived from the Lithuanian given name Nijolė (the -aitė ending denotes an unmarried daughter). | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėtė | Uncertain - a modern Lithuanian female name with no widely agreed traditional meaning. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėvaitienė | A married woman's Lithuanian surname indicating 'wife of / of the family of' a man with the base name Nijolėvaitis; ultimately related to the given name Nijolė. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėvaitė | Patronymic surname meaning 'daughter of Nijolė' (descendant or little Nijolė) | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Nijolėvičiūtė | Unmarried female surname meaning "daughter (descendant) of Nijolėvičius", ultimately derived from the given name Nijolė. | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Olgerd | From Lithuanian elements al- (all/every) + gird (to hear) - 'all‑hearing' (often interpreted as 'well‑known' or 'renowned') | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Olgierd | Hears all | Lithuanian, Polish | Boy | — | |
| Patrycija | Noble, patrician | Lithuanian | Girl | — | |
| Petras | Rock; stone | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Petrelis | Little Peter - 'little rock' (Peter = rock/stone) | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Pijus | Pious; dutiful; devout | Lithuanian | Boy | — | |
| Povilaitė | Patronymic surname meaning 'daughter (female descendant) of Povilas' - Povilas is the Lithuanian form of Paul. | Lithuanian | Girl | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Lithuanian-origin name in our dataset.