D
Masculine
Macedonian
Meaning & History
Dončo is a diminutive of the Macedonian name Andon, ultimately tracing back to the Roman family name Antonius. Andon is a variant of Anton, which is itself a standalone form used in many languages. The original root name, Anthony, has a significant historical background among notable figures such as Saint Anthony the Great, a 4th-century Egyptian hermit, and Mark Antony, the Roman general. Throughout the journey of names, Dončo holds the affectionate meaning as a 'diminutive' or version confirming its use as a beloved local form in Macedonian. Used primarily in Macedonia, it represents common onomastic traditions while differentiated from peripheral variants listed in other cultures, where they are sometimes hidden yet known but intended references span languages from Faroe Islands not fully. This connection offers all added cultural flair observed fondly naturally outside mere trivial name statistics.
Related Names
Other Languages & Cultures
(French)
Antoine (African American)
Antwan (Dutch)
Antonius (Basque)
Andoni, Antton (Ukrainian)
Anton (Bulgarian)
Antoniy, Andon, Doncho (Spanish)
Toni 1 (Polish)
Antoni (Croatian)
Antonijo (Spanish)
Antonio (Croatian)
Antun, Ante 1 (Serbian)
Anto (Croatian)
Tonći, Tonči (Czech)
Antonín (Limburgish)
Antoon (Dutch)
Antonie 2, Teun, Teunis, Theun, Theunis, Ton, Toon (English)
Antony, Anthony, Tony (Esperanto)
Antono, Anĉjo (Estonian)
Tõnis, Tõnu (Finnish)
Anttoni (French)
Titouan (Spanish)
Antón (Greek)
Antonios, Antonis (Hawaiian)
Akoni, Anakoni (Hungarian)
Antal, Tóni (Italian)
Antonello, Nello, Tonino, Tonio (Latvian)
Antons (Lithuanian)
Antanas (Portuguese)
Toninho (Portuguese (Brazilian))
Antônio (Portuguese (European))
António (Romanian)
Antoniu (Serbian)
Antonije (Slovene)
Tone 1 (Spanish)
Toño