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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)
Natja Hope Greek, Old Church Slavonic, Slavic Girl
Natka Diminutive form of Natalia - 'born on (Christmas)' / 'birthday' Slavic Girl
Nauka Slavic: "science, learning"; Sanskrit/Hindi: "boat" Hindi, Slavic Girl
Nebojsa Fearless; literally 'don't be afraid' Slavic Boy
Nedelka Born on Sunday / 'little Sunday' (diminutive of 'nedelja') Slavic Girl
Nedi Diminutive form - from Slavic meaning 'Sunday' (born on/associated with Sunday) or from Ned (Edward/Edmund) meaning 'wealthy guardian/protector' Slavic Unisex
Nedja Hope Slavic Girl
Nedya Hope Slavic Girl
Neilanya A contemporary blended name often interpreted as 'champion's grace' or 'blue grace' (combining Neil/Neel + Anya). Slavic Girl
Nen Diminutive of Nenad meaning 'unexpected'; also used affectionately to mean 'baby' in Portuguese/Brazilian. Brazilian, Portuguese, Slavic Unisex
Nenno Likely a diminutive of Nenad, meaning 'unexpected' or 'surprising'. Slavic Boy
Nepomuk From Nepomuk (a place name); chiefly associated with Saint John of Nepomuk Czech, Slavic Boy
Neva 'snow' (also linked to the Neva River; when tied to Irish Neve/Niamh, 'bright, radiant') Irish, Latin, Russian, Slavic, Spanish Girl
Nicolya Victory of the people English, Greek, Slavic Girl
Nikeeta Possibly 'abode' or 'dwelling' (from Sanskrit niketā); alternatively associated with 'victory' via the Greek root nikē Sanskrit, Slavic Girl
Nikitah Victorious Slavic Unisex
Nikolaevna Daughter of Nikolai (Nicholas); ultimately 'victory of the people.' Russian, Slavic Girl
Nikolayevich Son of Nikolai (son of Nicholas) Russian, Slavic Boy
Nikolayevichna Daughter of Nikolai (Nikolai = "victory of the people") Russian, Slavic Girl
Nikolene Victory of the people French, Greek, Slavic Girl
Nikytah Likely from Nikita - "victorious" (from Greek Nike/Niketas); in some South Asian contexts associated with "earth/abode" English, Slavic Girl
Ninka A diminutive meaning "little Nina"; often associated with the meaning of the root name (for example, 'grace' when linked to Anna) Slavic Girl
Nushechka Little sweet one; diminutive meaning 'sweet' or 'pleasant' Slavic Girl
Nydya Hope Slavic Girl
Nykyty Victorious; conqueror Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Obelya White, fair Bulgarian, Slavic Girl
Odra Named for the Odra river; associated with river/water Polish, Slavic Girl
Oko Varies by language: in Yoruba/Igbo it can mean 'husband' or relate to 'farm/field'; in Akan it means 'war' or 'battle'; in Polish/Slavic languages it means 'eye'. Akan, Igbo, Japanese, Polish, Slavic, Yoruba Boy
Olechka Pet form meaning 'little Olga' or 'little Oleg' - ultimately from an Old Norse root meaning 'holy, blessed'. Slavic Girl
Oleisia Likely "woman of the forest" or "from the woods," derived from the Slavic element "les" (forest); sometimes treated as a form of Olesia/Olessia. Slavic Girl
Oleksey Defender, helper, protector Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Oleksiyevich Patronymic meaning "son of Oleksiy" (Oleksiy derives from Greek Alexios, meaning "defender" or "helper"). Slavic Boy
Olenah Light, torch, bright Slavic, Ukrainian Girl
Olenia Associated with Helen: 'torch' or 'light, shining' Slavic Girl
Olenka Diminutive of Helen/Elena - 'little bright one' or 'little torch' (from Greek Helene) Slavic, Ukrainian Girl
Olesha From the forest Slavic Girl
Olesiah From the forest; woodland, "forest girl" Slavic Girl
Olesko Little Alexander - 'little defender of men' (diminutive of Alexander) Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Olessa From the forest; 'forest' or 'woodland' Slavic, Ukrainian Girl
Olexa Defender, helper Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Oliah Most likely a diminutive of Olga, meaning 'holy, blessed' (from Old Norse Helga); alternatively can be interpreted as a variant of Aliyah meaning 'to ascend.' Slavic Girl
Olienka Little Olena; derived from Helena meaning "light" or "torch" Slavic Girl
Olienkah Diminutive of Olena/Helena - 'light' or 'torch', 'little shining one'. Slavic Girl
Olinah Generally interpreted as 'joyful' or 'bright' (depending on root) Latin, Norse, Slavic Girl
Oliya Often treated as a form of Aliya/Aaliyah meaning "exalted, high; ascent" (Arabic/Hebrew). In Slavic contexts as Olya/Olia it traces to Olga meaning "holy, blessed." Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Slavic, Urdu Girl
Olyane Uncertain - could imply 'olive' (from Olivia), 'light' (from Helena), or 'God has answered' (from Eliana). Slavic Girl
Olyenka Affectionate diminutive meaning "little Olena/Olga"; associated with "light/torch" (Helen) or "holy/blessed" (Olga); sometimes interpreted colloquially as "little deer" Slavic Girl
Olyenkah Affectionate diminutive of Olena/Elena - 'little Helen' (light, torch) Slavic, Ukrainian Girl
Omeljan From Aemilianus/Aemilius - generally interpreted as "rival" or "emulating; industrious" Slavic, Ukrainian Boy
Ondrejko Diminutive or 'son of' Ondřej (Andrew) - ultimately from Greek Andreas meaning 'manly' or 'man/warrior'. Slavic Boy

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