Wild Names
ABOOKSIGUN:
Native American Algonquin name meaning
wildcat
ABUNGU:
African Luo name meaning
of the forest
Russian form of Latin
Agrippina, meaning "wild
horse."
Variant of Latin
Agrippina, meaning
wild
horse
Russian masculine form of Latin
Agrippina,
meaning "wild horse."
Variant of Latin
Agrippina, meaning
wild
horse
Latin biblical name of the
Herod Agrippa of the
New Testament who ordered the execution of the apostle
James, and the imprisonment of
Peter. The name is
used as a feminine name in Russia, it is therefore a unisex name, meaning
"wild horse."
Feminine form of Latin unisex
Agrippa, meaning
wild
horse
Variant of Latin
Agrippina, meaning
wild
horse
Welsh myth name of the Lord of Annwn (
un-world; under-world), possibly meaning
unrestrained wildness
Unrestrained Hindi myth name of a goddess of the night, the
sky, and the stars. She was the wife of the sage Vasishtha, and is
identified with the morning star.
Native American Mapuche name meaning
wild
condor
Bengali form of Hindi
Vipin, meaning
forest
Original form of Welsh
Blodeuwedd, name of a woman made from flowers, and lover of Goronwy
in the Mabinogion. The name was derived from
Proto-Celtic
Blāto-weid-ā meaning
flower-faced/wild
feminine (spirit)
Later variant of Welsh name
Blodeuedd, meaning
flower-faced/wild
feminine (spirit)
English name derived from the name of the Italian island of Capri. The Latin name for
Capri is Capreæ, meaning
goats However, the Greeks were the
first to populate the island, therefore the name probably derived from Greek
kapros, meaning
wild boar
Hindi myth name of the monster destroyed by Chamunda
Devi, meaning
bright or
fierce
Norman French surname transferred to English forename
use, meaning
from
the forest
Variant of English
Deforest, meaning
from the forest
Sumerian myth name of the wild-man friend of Gilgamesh,
possibly meaning
creature of Enki
English surname of French origin,
transferred to forename use, meaning
lives in/by an enclosed
wood
Little rough one Irish name composed of garbh
rough and a diminutive suffix.
English form of Irish
Garbhan, meaning
little
rough one
African Luo name meaning
fierceness; building
Pet form of Russian
Agrafena,
meaning "wild horse."
African Ganda name meaning
wild cat
Chamoru name meaning
jungle; forest
Biblical name of a Kenite woman who killed
Sisera,
a Canaanite general and enemy of the Israelites, meaning
wild
she-goat
Possibly a
Romani variant of
biblical
Jael, the
name of a Kenite woman who killed
Sisera,
a Canaanite general and enemy of the Israelites, meaning
wild
she-goat
Variant of
biblical
Jael, meaning
wild she-goat
Variant of biblical
Jael, meaning
wild she-goat
Variant of Irish
Lorccán, meaning
little fierce one
Little fierce one Irish name composed of the Gaelic element lorcc
fierce and a diminutive suffix.
Arabic name meaning
wild cow
Basque name meaning
untamed; wild
Japanese name meaning
forest child
Hawaiian name meaning
forest
Russian form of
Agrippina, meaning "wild
horse."
Russian form of
Agrippina, meaning "wild
horse."
Nickname for Russian
Ogrifina, meaning "wild
horse."
Russian form of
Agrippina, meaning "wild
horse."
Russian form of
Agrippina, meaning "wild
horse."
Basque name meaning
forest
Egyptian name meaning
the barbarian
Italian name meaning "wild."
Biblical name of a companion of Saint Paul.
The name is a nickname for Greek
Silouanus, meaning
from the forest
Greek form of
Roman Silvanus, meaning "from
the forest."
Nickname for Bulgarian
Silviya, meaning
from the
forest
Feminine form of Italian
Silvano,
meaning "from the forest."
Italian form of
Roman Silvanus,
meaning "from the forest."
From the forest Roman myth name of a god of forests, derived
from the Latin word silva, meaning
forest, wood
From the forest English name derived from Latin silva,
meaning
forest, wood
Feminine form of English
Silvester,
meaning
from the forest
Spanish form of English
Silvester, meaning "from the
forest."
Italian form of English
Silvester, meaning "from the
forest."
Feminine form of
Roman Silvius,
meaning
from the forest
Croatian form of
Roman Silvia, meaning
from the
forest
Italian, Portuguese and Spanish form of
Roman Silvius,
meaning "from the forest."
Romanian form of
Roman Silvius, meaning "from
the forest."
From the forest Roman name derived from Latin silva,
meaning
forest, wood
Bulgarian form of
Roman Silvia, meaning
from the
forest
Pet form of English
Silvester, meaning
from the
forest
Norwegian form of Old Norse
Sverrir, meaning
"wild, restless."
Old Norse name, originally a byname for a
wild, restless, person, derived from the term sverra, meaning
to spin, swing, swirl
French form of
Roman Silvanus, meaning
from the forest
Feminine form of French
Sylvain,
meaning
from the forest
English form of Italian
Silvana,
meaning
from the forest
Variant of English
Silvester, meaning
from the forest
French form of English
Sylvester, meaning
from the
forest
Finnish form of
Roman Silvia,
meaning
from the forest
Variant of
Roman Silvia,
meaning
from the forest
Variant of French
Sylvaine, meaning
from the
forest
Variant of French
Sylviane, meaning
from the
forest
French form of
Roman Silvia,
meaning
from the forest
Polish form of English
Silvester,
meaning "from the forest."
Polish form of
Roman Silvia,
meaning "from the forest."
Hungarian form of English
Silvester,
meaning
"from the forest."
Hungarian form of
Roman Silvia,
meaning "from the forest."
Biblical name of a descendant of
Shem,
meaning
ibex, wild goat
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