| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broska | Affectionate diminutive, often interpreted as 'little peach' or an endearing pet form of a Slavic name | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Brynica | From the place-name Brynica; can be understood as 'little Bryn' or 'place by the hill/river' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Bucar | Unknown; no established given-name meaning. May derive from a surname, place name, or occupational root | Bosnian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Buda | Unclear - likely derives from an old personal name or place-name rather than having a single established lexical meaning. | Hungarian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Budek | Diminutive of Bud- names meaning "little Bud"; from Slavic root bud- "to awaken, be alert" (as a given name) or derived from Polish "budka" "booth" (as a surname) | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Budislav | From Slavic bud- 'to awaken, be' + -slav 'glory, fame' - 'one who awakens glory' or 'awakening of glory' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Budo | Slavic: 'awakened' or 'watchful' (from root 'bud-' meaning 'to wake'); Japanese: 'martial way' or 'martial arts'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Bura | Varies by origin: 'wind/storm' (Slavic); an ethnonym (Nigerian Bura); possibly linked to the legendary Buraq/Burak | Arabic, Slavic, Turkish | Unisex | — | |
| Burack | Could mean 'lightning' via Arabic/Turkish Buraq, 'blessed' if from Hebrew Baruch, or be a surname derived from Polish 'burak' ('beet'). | Hebrew, Polish, Slavic, Turkish | Boy | — | |
| Burakovskyi | “of the Burakov family” / “from Burakov” (literally linked to the root meaning “beet”) | Slavic, Ukrainian | Boy | — | |
| Buras | No established, widely accepted meaning; may derive from a surname, place-name, or a root word in a specific language | Arabic, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Burtan | Possibly 'from the fortified town' (English Burton) or 'strong/steadfast' if related to Turkic names | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Calyna | Viburnum (guelder rose) - a plant symbolic of beauty, love and homeland in Slavic cultures. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Carryna | Beloved; dear | English, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Casimire | Bringer or proclaimer of peace | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Caslav | Likely from Slavic elements ča/čast ('honor' or possibly 'await') + -slav ('glory') - roughly 'honored glory' or 'awaited glory'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Castimir | Bringer or proclaimer of peace (from Slavic elements kaz-/kaziti and mir 'peace'/'world') | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cazimira | From Slavic elements meaning 'proclaim/establish' + 'peace' - often interpreted as 'proclaimer/guardian of peace'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cazimiro | Proclaimer or establisher of peace (bringer of peace) | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ceca | Light, brightness | Russian, Serbian, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cedomilo | From čedo ('child') + milo/mil ('dear, gracious'): 'beloved child' or 'one who loves/cares for children.' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Celinka | Diminutive meaning 'little heavenly' or 'little one of the heavens' (from Celina/Celia, from Latin caelum 'heaven') | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cermaka | From a Czech root meaning 'red' or 'red-haired' (surname likely referring to red hair or complexion; sometimes associated with redbird) | Czech, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cerny | Derived from the Czech adjective černý meaning "black" or "dark (hair/complexion)" | Czech, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ceslaus | From Slavic elements čest 'honor' + slava 'glory' - 'honor and glory'. | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ceslav | Honor and glory | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cestislav | Honor and glory | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cestmir | From Czech čest 'honor' + mír 'peace' - 'honor and peace' (or 'honorable peace') | Czech, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cestomír | Peaceful journey | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cesya | Diminutive/pet form - typically 'little Cecilia' (Cecilia from Latin caecus 'blind') or, in some Yiddish/Slavic use, a pet form related to Hebrew Chaya ('life'). | Latin, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Chayka | Seagull (a seabird) | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Chesna | Honorable (primary); occasionally associated with 'oak grove' (alternate) | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Christov | Patronymic meaning 'son/descendant of Christo' - by extension 'follower of Christ' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Chyra | Likely 'lady' (Greek) or 'clear/bright' (Italian/Latin); alternatively may stem from a Slavic surname. | Greek, Italian, Latin, Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cibor | Honor fighter - one who fights for or defends honor | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cilka | Diminutive of Cecilia (from Latin caecus, 'blind'); broadly understood as 'little/young Cecilia' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Clarolbnelah | A modern compound meaning 'bright/clear grace' - combining ideas of light/clarity and grace or gift. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Corney | Originally a diminutive of Cornelius meaning "horn" (Latin); also appears as an English surname/place name possibly linked to 'corn' or a locality. | English, Latin, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ctibor | From Slavic cti- 'honour' + -bor 'fight/warrior' - 'honour-fighter' / 'one who fights for honour' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ctislav | From Slavic elements cti- (honor) + -slav (glory, fame) - 'honor and glory' or 'one who honors glory' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Cvetana | From Slavic root 'cvet' meaning 'flower' or 'blossom'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cvetanka | Derived from the Slavic root 'cvet' meaning 'flower' or 'blossom' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cvetka | Flower, blossom | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Cyrillia | Female form of Cyril, meaning 'lordly' or 'of the lord' (from Greek kyrios 'lord') | Greek, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Czeck | Denotes a person from the Czech lands; 'Czech' (Bohemian) | Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Czeslava | Derived from Slavic elements meaning 'honor' (čest) and 'glory' (slava) - 'honor and glory'. | Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Daesha | Likely a modern variant of Dasha (diminutive of Daria - associated with Daria's meanings such as 'possessing goodness' or wealth) or influenced by Aisha ('alive, living'). | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Dagomir | 'day' + 'peace' - roughly 'day of peace' or 'bringer of peace' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Daivyd | Beloved | Hebrew, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Dalibor | Fighter from afar / far-off warrior | Bulgarian, Croatian, Polish, Serbian, Slavic, Slovak | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Slavic-origin name in our dataset.