| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinka | Likely related to 'gold' or 'golden' (from Japanese kin = gold); can also be a diminutive of Kinga. In Japanese, kinka (金貨) can mean 'gold coin'. | English, Japanese, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Kirilr | Derived from Greek Kyrillos, meaning 'lordly' or 'of the lord' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kiry | Possibly 'skin' or 'bark' (Maori); alternatively linked to roots meaning 'lord' (Greek) or, more loosely, forms related to Kira | Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Kisia | Uncertain - origin-dependent. Could be a local/placename in East Africa, a diminutive related to Katherine ('pure') if linked to Kasia, or related to Kesia/Keziah (cassia/spice) in other traditions. | African American, English, Polish, Slavic, Swahili | Girl | — | |
| Kiska | Kitten, little cat; affectionate pet name | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Klemenz | Merciful, gentle, mild | Latin, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kliment | Merciful, gentle, mild | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kolenka | Affectionate diminutive meaning 'little Kol' or 'little Nikolai' (related to Nikolai, 'people's victory') | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Kolinka | Little Kolya; a diminutive related to Nikolai/Nikola - 'little victory of the people' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Kolja | Victory of the people | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kolyen | Victory of the people | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kolyia | Diminutive of Nikolai - "victory of the people" | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Konstancija | Steadfast, constant | Latin, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Konstantinovich | Son of Konstantin (Konstantin means 'steadfast' or 'constant') | Russian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Konstantinovna | Daughter of Konstantin; Konstantin means 'steadfast, constant'. | Russian, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Kost | Diminutive/short form of Konstantin/Constantine - 'steadfast, constant' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kostenka | Diminutive form of Konstantin - 'constant, steadfast' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kostya | Steadfast, constant | Russian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kotka | Finnish: "eagle"; Polish/Slavic: "female cat" (diminutive of kot) | Finnish, Polish, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Koz | Often a short form of Kozma/Cosmas meaning 'order, universe'; alternatively linked to Slavic 'kos' ('blackbird') or Turkish 'koz' ('nut/seed'). | Greek, Slavic, Turkish | Boy | — | |
| Kozel | 'Billy goat' - originally a nickname or occupational name related to goats/goatherds. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kral | King, ruler | Slavic, Turkish | Boy | — | |
| Krali | King; royal, kingly | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Krassimira | From Slavic elements kras ("beautiful") + mira ("peace/world") - essentially "beautiful peace" or "beautiful world". | Bulgarian, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Krov | Derived from a Slavic root meaning 'blood' (by extension: kin/lineage) or archaically 'shelter/roof' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kruto | Steeply; cool | Russian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kryshtof | Bearer of Christ | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Krystiann | Follower of Christ | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Krysto | Follower of Christ; 'anointed' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Krystupasr | Bearer of Christ (Christ‑bearer) | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kub | Short form of Jakub (Jacob), meaning 'supplanter' or 'holder of the heel.' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kubas | Derived from Jacob - 'supplanter' or 'one who follows' | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Kuka | No single established meaning. Meaning depends on language and context. In Finnish 'kuka' means 'who'; elsewhere it may function as a diminutive, nickname, or a name with local significance. | Japanese, Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Kurena | Unclear; possibly 'black' if derived from Japanese elements (kuro + -na), or a variant of Karen/Karena meaning 'pure', or related to Hebrew 'ray/horn' | Latin, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Kurstaina | Follower of Christ; Christian (from Greek 'Christos' meaning 'anointed'). | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Květa | Flower, blossom | Czech, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Lachman | Originally a surname meaning 'man from Lach' / 'Polish man'; used as a given name in some families. | German, Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Lad | 'boy' (English); when from Slavic roots, short for Ladislav/Ladislaus meaning 'glorious ruler' or 'rule and glory' | English, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ladanicka | Diminutive of Lada - 'little Lada'; associated with the Slavic goddess Lada, conveying beauty, love, harmony, or beloved | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Ladanycka | Related to harmony/order or denoting origin 'from Ladány' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Ladislao | Glorious ruler (from Slavic elements meaning 'rule' and 'glory') | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ladislaus | Glorious ruler (from Slavic elements meaning 'rule' + 'glory') | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ladislav | Glorious ruler (from Slavic elements vlad = rule and slav = glory) | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ladyslas | Rule + glory; 'glorious ruler' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Ladyslav | Glorious ruler | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Lajčo | A diminutive or pet form of a Slavic male name (likely derived from forms such as Lajos, Lajoš, Ladislav or Alojz); roughly 'little Laj' or 'young Laj'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Laki | In Samoan often interpreted as 'lucky'; in Indonesian/Malay it means 'male' or 'man'; also used as a short form/nickname in some Slavic/Greek contexts. | Indonesian, Malay, Samoan, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Lako | Likely 'defender/protector' via Albanian Leka/Alexander, or 'to go/move' in Fijian; exact meaning depends on cultural origin. | Albanian, Polynesian, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Lavra | Associated with the laurel (symbol of victory, honor); in ecclesiastical usage, refers to a monastic complex (lavra). | Greek, Latin, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Lavrentij | From Laurentum; crowned with laurel (laurelled) | Slavic | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Slavic-origin name in our dataset.