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Slavic names - Baby names with the origin Slavic

Showing 50 of 1,484 names
Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Doma Home, house; (Japanese) earthen/dirt-floor space Japanese, Slavic Girl
Domele No established meaning; likely a diminutive or variant related to 'dom-' (home) or to Dominic/Dominique ('of the Lord'); meaning remains uncertain Slavic Unisex
Domena Belonging to the Lord; alternatively related to Latin 'domina' meaning 'lady' or 'mistress' Latin, Slavic Girl
Domencya Belonging to the Lord; of the Lord (traditionally also 'born on Sunday') Slavic Girl
Domencyah Belonging to the Lord / of the Lord Latin, Slavic Girl
Domik In Russian, 'little house'; as a diminutive of Dominic, connected to 'of the Lord'. Slavic Boy
Donatyen Given; often interpreted as 'gift (from God)' Latin, Slavic Boy
Donica Possibly 'of the Lord' (from Dominica) or 'little lady'/'woman' (from Donna); a feminine given name. Italian, Slavic Girl
Doritza Diminutive of Dora/Dorotea - 'little gift' or 'gift of God' Slavic Girl
Dorkina Probably a diminutive of Dora/Dorota meaning "gift of God," or a feminine form meaning "daughter of Dorkin" Slavic Girl
Dorya Possibly 'gift' (from Dora/Dorothea) or 'sea' (from Persian Darya); may also be a form of Doria. Greek, Italian, Latin, Persian, Slavic Girl
Douchan From Slavic 'duša' meaning 'soul' or 'spirit'. Slavic Boy
Draga Dear, beloved Slavic Girl
Dragimir Dear/precious peace Slavic Boy
Dragisha Dear, beloved; precious Slavic Girl
Dragomir ‘dear/precious’ + ‘peace/world’ - 'precious peace' or 'dear peace' Slavic Boy
Dragomira From drag 'dear/beloved' + mir 'peace/world' - 'beloved/precious peace' Slavic Girl
Dragoslav From Slavic elements drago 'dear, beloved' + slav 'glory, fame' - 'dear glory' or 'beloved glory' Slavic Boy
Dragoslava From 'drago' (dear, beloved) + 'slava' (glory, fame) - 'beloved glory' or 'precious glory'. Slavic Girl
Drogomir Dear/precious + peace (i.e., 'precious peace' or 'dear peace') Slavic Boy
Drovor Wood/forest guardian Slavic Boy
Duba Likely derived from Slavic dub meaning 'oak' - 'oak' or 'of the oak'. In Arabic contexts it is primarily a toponym and may not have a separate given-name meaning. Arabic, Slavic Girl
Dudin From the Slavic root 'dud-' meaning 'pipe' or 'flute'; roughly 'piper' or 'descendant of a piper.' Slavic Boy
Dudina Associated with 'duda' (pipe/bagpipe); originally a surname meaning 'descendant/associated with a pipe-player' Slavic Girl
Dudyn Probably 'son/descendant or diminutive of Duda'; root dud- is associated with bagpipes or a pipe-player/nickname Slavic Boy
Dusanek Diminutive of Dušan, 'little soul' (from Slavic root duša meaning 'soul') Slavic Boy
Duscha Soul, spirit Slavic Girl
Dusha Soul, spirit Slavic Girl
Dushan From Slavic duša 'soul' or 'spirit' - 'soulful' / 'man of spirit'. Slavic Boy
Dushana From Slavic duša 'soul' - often interpreted as 'soul', 'little soul' or 'beloved' Slavic Girl
Duska Diminutive of Dušana/duša - 'soul' (often rendered 'little soul' or 'dear soul') Slavic Girl
Duson From Slavic duša 'soul, spirit' - broadly 'soulful' or 'man of spirit' Slavic Boy
Dusya Diminutive of Avdotya/Evdokia; ultimately from Greek Eudokia meaning 'good will' or 'good reputation'. Russian, Slavic Girl
Dušana From Slavic duša 'soul' - 'soulful' or 'of the soul'. Slavic Girl
Dyma Short form of Dmitry: 'follower/devotee of Demeter' Slavic Boy
Dymetrey Devoted to Demeter (the Greek goddess of agriculture) Slavic Boy
Dymetriys Devoted to Demeter (goddess of agriculture) Slavic Boy
Dymitri Follower of Demeter (devoted to the Greek goddess of the harvest) Slavic Boy
Dymitriah Devoted to or follower of Demeter (Greek goddess of the harvest/earth) Slavic Girl
Dymtry Follower of or devoted to Demeter (the Greek goddess of the harvest) Slavic Boy
Dymyter Devoted to Demeter (goddess of the harvest/agriculture) Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Dynka A diminutive form of names beginning with Din-/Dyn-; generally 'little Dina' or 'little one' (if linked to Dina/Dinah, from Hebrew meaning 'judged' or 'vindicated'). Slavic Girl
Dyshyn Derived from a Slavic root meaning 'breath' or 'breath of life' Slavic Boy
Dyta Diminutive of Edita/Edith - 'rich/blessed in war' (from Old English elements meaning 'wealth/blessed' + 'war') Slavic Girl
Ela Turkish: 'hazel' (hazel-eyed); Hebrew: 'terebinth' or 'oak' (Elah); also used as a pet form of Elizabeth/Eleanor. Hebrew, Slavic, Turkish Girl
Eleck Uncertain - commonly taken as 'defender of men' if from Alexander, or 'God has helped' if linked to Eleazar; exact meaning depends on origin. English, Hebrew, Hungarian, Slavic Boy
Elenitsa Diminutive of Elena - 'little Elena' (Elena/Helene = 'torch, shining'); also interpreted from Slavic elen 'deer' as 'little doe' Bulgarian, Slavic Girl
Elina Bright, shining light; torch Finnish, Greek, Hebrew, Scandinavian, Slavic Girl
Elishka Pledged to God; 'God is my oath.' Czech, Slavic Girl
Elkah Diminutive or variant of Elizabeth/Elisheva - "God is my oath" Hebrew, Slavic Girl

Slavic name popularity over time

Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Slavic-origin name in our dataset.

1,484
Names in this origin
33
With data in 2025
0
Births 2025
99,851
Peak year 0