Native American
Cherokee name meaning
fawn
Hebrew name meaning
deer, gazelle
Feminine form of Hebrew
Ayal, meaning
deer;
gazelle
Variant of Hebrew
Ayala, meaning
deer; gazelle
Hebrew name derived from a name for the morning star, meaning
deer; gazelle
From the American English nickname for a
high-spirited young man, itself from the word for a
male deer or goat
Turkish name meaning
young gazelle
Little fawn Irish/Gaelic name composed of the word damh
fawn and a diminutive suffix.
Deer farm English surname transferred to unisex forename use, composed of Old Norse diur
deer and Danish -by or Old Norse býr
farm
Variant of English
Darby, meaning
deer farm
Variant of English unisex
Devon,
meaning
worshiper of the god Dumnonos
Irish surname transferred to English forename use, itself from Gaelic Ó Damháin,
descendant of Damhán, a byname meaning
fawn
English form of Irish/Gaelic
Damhnait,
meaning
little fawn
Greek biblical form of Aramaic
Tabitha,
meaning "gazelle." See Acts 9:36 in the
New Testament.
Variant of Greek
Dorcas, meaning
"gazelle."
Variant of Greek
Dorcas, meaning
"gazelle."
English form of Irish/Gaelic
Damhnait,
meaning
little fawn
Variant of English
Dymphna, meaning
little fawn
Hungarian legend name of the mother of the Hungarian people,
possibly meaning "deer."
Hungarian named derived from
Enéh, possibly
meaning "deer."
Variant of Hebrew
Ayal,
meaning
deer, gazelle
Rare but existing English forename derived from the vocabulary word meaning
baby deer
Variant of English
Fawn, meaning
baby deer
Deer wood English surname transferred to unisex forename use, composed of the Old English elements heorot
hart, male deer and leah
clearing, wood
Pet form of Yiddish
Hirsh, meaning
deer
Variant of Yiddish
Hirsh, meaning
deer
Variant of Yiddish
Herschel, meaning
deer
Variant of Yiddish
Herschel,
meaning
deer
Yiddish name meaning
deer
Variant of Yiddish
Herschel, meaning
deer
Icelandic name meaning
deer
Native American Choctaw
unisex name meaning
deer
Armenian name meaning
deer
Native American Osage name meaning
fawn
Variant of Hebrew unisex
Ophrah, meaning
young
fawn; young mountain
Little deer Irish myth name of a son of
Fionn mac Cumhail, composed of the element os
deer and a diminutive suffix.
Hebrew unisex name derived from the biblical name of a descendant of Judah
and a city in Manasseh, meaning
young fawn; young
mountain
Feminine variant of Hebrew unisex
Ophrah, meaning
young fawn; young mountain
Spanish form of Irish
Oscar, meaning "deer-lover."
English form of Irish
Oisín, meaning
little
deer
Polish and Scandinavian form of Irish
Oscar, meaning
"deer-lover."
Finnish form of Irish
Oscar, meaning
deer-lover
Latvian form of Irish
Oscar, meaning
deer-lover
Nickname for Finnish
Oskari, meaning
deer-lover
Feminine form of Irish
Ossian, meaning
little deer
Variant of Irish
Oisín, meaning
little
deer
Hungarian form of Irish
Oscar, meaning "deer-lover."
Arabic name meaning
young gazelle
Roe-deer wood English surname transferred to forename use, itself from a place name composed of the Old Norse elements rá
roe-deer and skógr
copse, wood
Japanese name meaning
gentle deer
English variant of Aramaic
Tabitha, meaning
gazelle
English pet form of Aramaic
Tabitha,
meaning
gazelle
Aramaic
biblical name of a woman restored to life by
Peter,
meaning
gazelle The Greeks translated this name to Dorcas
in the New Testament. See Acts 9:36.
English unisex pet form of Aramaic
Tabitha gazelle and English
Theobald people-bold
Armenian name meaning
hind; red deer
Hebrew biblical name
of the mother of
King Joash, meaning
deer