| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oktawiusz | Eighth (born eighth) | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Olgierd | Hears all | Lithuanian, Polish | Boy | — | |
| Olka | Holy, blessed | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Osika | Aspen (aspen tree) | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Osina | Meaning varies by origin and is not well-documented; in Slavic contexts it may relate to place- or nature-words, while any West African meaning would come from local languages and differ accordingly. | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Otyliah | From the Old High German element uod meaning 'wealth, fortune' | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Otylyah | Wealth, fortune; fortunate | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Pani | Hindi/Sanskrit: pānī (पानी) = "water". Polish: pani = "lady" or "Mrs." (a title rather than a traditional given name). | Hindi, Polish, Sanskrit | Unisex | — | |
| Panna | In Hungarian a diminutive of Anna (from Hebrew Hannah, 'grace'); in Sanskrit/Hindi means 'emerald' or 'jade'; in Polish the common word panna means 'maiden' or 'miss'. | Hindi, Hungarian, Polish, Sanskrit | Girl | — | |
| Pati | As a diminutive of Patricia: 'noble'/'noblewoman' (from Latin patricius). In Sanskrit/Hindi, pati means 'husband'. | Hindi, Polish, Sanskrit | Girl | — | |
| Patrycyka | Noble; of the patrician class | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Pauliny | Small, humble | Latin, Polish | Girl | — | |
| Pawelek | Little Paul; derived meaning 'small' or 'humble' (from Paulus) | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Pawell | Small, humble | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Piotrek | Rock, stone | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Piotrka | Rock, stone | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Piotrus | Diminutive of Piotr - "little Peter" (Peter means "rock" or "stone") | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Polak | A Pole; a man from Poland | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemek | Diminutive of Przemysław, meaning 'prudent/clever glory' or 'ingenious fame'. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemysl | Clever/ingenious (from Slavic roots meaning 'thought/ingenuity') | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemyslaw | From Slavic elements przem- (‘to think, be prudent’) + -sław/‘glory, fame’ - roughly ‘famous for wisdom’ or ‘prudent glory’. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemysławski | Originally 'of/related to Przemysław' - Przemysław means 'clever/ingenious' or 'one who thinks ahead'. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemysłek | Diminutive of Przemysław; from Slavic 'przemysł' (ingenuity, forethought) + 'sław' (glory) - 'little/young clever one of glory'. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Przemysłko | Forethought; clever, industrious (one who thinks ahead) | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Pulaski | Originally a Polish toponymic surname meaning "of/from Pulaski" (from a place name); associated with the noble Pulaski family, notably Casimir Pulaski. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Radoslaw | Joyful glory (from Slavic rad 'joy/willing' + sław 'glory/fame') | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Radzisłav | Joyful/glorious - from Slavic rad 'happy/eager' + slav 'glory/fame' | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Radzisław | From Slavic elements rad 'joy/willing' + sław 'glory/fame' - 'eager for glory' or 'joy of glory'. | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Remigiusz | Oarsman, rower | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Renatah | Reborn; born again | Czech, Latin, Polish, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Renia | Often a diminutive of Irena meaning "peace"; sometimes associated with Renée meaning "reborn" or Rina meaning "joy" | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Rennia | Generally interpreted as 'reborn' or 'peaceful' depending on which root is invoked; a modern invented/variant name | English, Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Rokita | From a Slavic root referring to a willow or place of willows; diminutive sense 'little willow' or 'willow grove' | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Rozmunda | Originally from Old German elements meaning "horse-protector" (hros + mund); later folk-etymologized as "pure/clean rose" | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Rumia | Rosy, red; alternatively 'from Rumia' (the Polish town) | Bulgarian, Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Rurek | Likely 'little Rurik' (diminutive of Rurik, historically 'famous ruler') or, in Polish usage, 'little pipe' (from rura) | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Rydygier | Famous (renowned) spear | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Ryki | Often a modern spelling of Ricky/Rikki (from Richard - 'brave ruler') or from Japanese riki meaning 'strength, power'. | English, Japanese, Polish | Unisex | — | |
| Sadock | Righteous; just | Hebrew, Polish | Boy | — | |
| Sadoski | From the orchard / orchard-dweller | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Sadowie | 'place of orchards' or 'orchard settlement' (from Polish sad = orchard) | Polish, Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Sadowy | Of the orchard; orchard-related (implying orchard owner or gardener) | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Saneta | God is gracious | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Sasanka | Slavic: 'anemone' (the flower). Sanskrit/Indian: variant of 'Shashanka' meaning 'moon'. | Czech, Indian, Polish, Sanskrit, Slovak | Girl | — | |
| Satyna | From the word 'satin' (the fabric) - connotes silkiness, smoothness, elegance | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Serycka | Originally denotes belonging to or originating from Seryk (a place or personal name) - essentially 'of/from Seryk'. | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Seweryna | Derived from Latin severus: 'stern, serious, severe' | Polish | Girl | — | |
| Siwa | Sanskrit: 'auspicious, gracious' (associated with the Hindu god Śiva). Slavic/Polish: derived from 'siwy/siwa' meaning 'gray'. | Hindu, Indonesian, Javanese, Polish, Sanskrit, Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Stanisław | Becomes glorious; achieves fame | Polish | Boy | — | |
| Stashu | Diminutive of Stanisław/Stanislav - 'little glorious one' (from Slavic elements meaning 'become' + 'glory'). | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Polish-origin name in our dataset.