| Name | Meaning | Origins | Gender | Popularity (last 10y) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meleda | Possibly "from Mljet" (the island historically called Meleda) or derived from mel- meaning "honey, sweet" | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Melena | From Greek 'melaina' meaning 'black, dark'; in Romance languages also 'mane' (hair). | Greek, Italian, Slavic, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Melenah | Possibly 'honey' (Greek), 'gracious/dear' (Slavic), or 'yellow/honey‑colored' (Welsh) | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Merta | Multiple possible origins: as a form of Marta/Märta meaning 'lady' or 'mistress' (from Martha), or in Balinese/Indonesian contexts associated with prosperity/goodness; also appears as a Slavic surname-turned given name. | Czech, Indonesian, Scandinavian, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Meryka | Probably a variant of Maria/Marika; associated meanings of Maria include 'bitter', 'beloved', or 'sea of bitterness'. | English, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mickola | Victory of the people | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mikhalina | Who is like God? | Latin, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mikol | Victory of the people | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mikola | Slavic form of Nicholas, from Greek Nikolaos meaning 'victory of the people'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mikos | From Greek Nikolaos: "victory of the people." | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milaine | Likely 'gracious, dear' (from Mila) or, if linked to Mélanie, associated with 'dark/black'; overall conveys 'beloved' or 'sweet'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milanka | Beloved, dear (from the Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'gracious, dear') | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milea | From Slavic 'Mila' meaning 'gracious' or 'dear'; also used as a contemporary Indonesian given name. | Indonesian, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milek | Diminutive meaning 'little/young beloved' from the Slavic root mil- ('gracious, dear, kind'). | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milenah | Gracious; dear, beloved | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milenko | From the Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'gracious, dear' - roughly 'little dear' or 'beloved'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Miliena | Gracious, dear; beloved | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milik | Surname-derived name; exact meaning uncertain. Likely related to the Slavic root 'mil-' (dear, gracious) or a diminutive form of a personal name | Polish, Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milinka | From the Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'gracious, dear' - essentially 'little beloved' or 'dear one'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milisa | From the Slavic root 'mila' meaning 'dear, gracious, beloved'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milita | Beloved, gracious | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Militsa | Dear, gracious, beloved | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milivoj | Gracious/dear warrior | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milka-Rose | Combines Milka ('gracious' or from Hebrew 'queen') and Rose ('rose, the flower') - roughly 'dear/queen rose'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milnar | Miller - one who works at or is associated with a mill | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milojka | 'little beloved' or 'dear one' (from Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'dear, gracious') | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milorad | From Slavic elements milo 'gracious, dear' + rad 'work/care/joy, eager' - roughly 'dear joy' or 'gracious and eager'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milosava | From Slavic mil ('dear, gracious') + slava ('glory') - 'dear glory' or 'gracious glory'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milosch | Gracious, dear, beloved | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Milosh | Dear; beloved; gracious | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Miloslav | From Slavic mil 'gracious, dear' + slav 'glory, fame' - 'gracious/dear glory'. | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Miloslava | From Slavic elements mil- ('gracious, dear') + -slav ('glory, fame') - 'gracious/dear glory' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Milun | From the Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'dear, gracious, beloved.' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Miluska | Dear, beloved; gracious | Czech, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Miluš | From Slavic element 'mil-' meaning 'dear, beloved, gracious' | Slavic, Slovak | Boy | — | |
| Miluša | From the Slavic root 'mil' meaning 'gracious, dear, beloved' - essentially 'little dear' or 'beloved'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Minca | A diminutive/pet form often of Wilhelmina (from Germanic elements meaning 'will' + 'helmet' - 'resolute protector'); also used as a short form of Dominika or Mina. | Dutch, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mirchik | Little peace / little world (affectionate diminutive) | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mire | Albanian: "good" (from mirë). From Slavic root 'mir': "peace" or "world". Also used as a short form of Mireille in French. | Albanian, French, Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mirita | Little Mira/Maria; interpreted as 'little wonder' or 'little peace' | Slavic, Spanish | Girl | — | |
| Mirka | Diminutive of Miroslava/Miroslav: 'mir' = peace + 'slav' = glory → 'peaceful glory' / 'famous for peace' | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mirke | From the Slavic root mir meaning "peace" or "world"; a diminutive sense: "little peace" or "peaceful" | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Mirny | Peaceful; 'of peace' (from Slavic root 'mir') | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Miroslavka | Diminutive of Miroslav/Miroslava from 'mir' (peace) + 'slava' (glory) - 'peaceful glory' or 'little peaceful glory'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Miroslawa | From Slavic mir 'peace' + sława 'glory' - 'peaceful glory' or 'glory of peace'. | Slavic | Girl | — | |
| Misham | Unclear - possibly 'from there' (Hebrew) or linked to Michael's sense 'Who is like God?' | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mishkaa | Little bear (diminutive of the Russian word for bear); indirectly linked to Mikhail meaning 'Who is like God?' | Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| mishy | Diminutive of Mikhail: 'Who is like God?'; alternatively an affectionate 'little bear' sense from mishka | Russian, Slavic | Unisex | — | |
| Misko | Diminutive form meaning 'little Mi' - a pet form of names beginning with 'Mi-' (e.g., Miha/Mihailo/Miroslav/Milan); exact sense depends on the root name (e.g., 'dear/gracious', 'peace and glory', or 'who is like God'). | Slavic | Boy | — | |
| Mitja | Devoted to Demeter (Greek goddess of the harvest/earth) | Slavic | Boy | — |
Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Slavic-origin name in our dataset.