Names Categorized "Bitange i princeze characters"
32 Names found
Adriana is a feminine form of Adrian, used across numerous languages including Bulgarian, Czech, Dutch, English, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, and Spanish. The name ultimately derives from the Roman cogn...
Andrija is a Croatian and Serbian masculine given name, cognate to the Greek Andreas and English Andrew. It derives from the Greek element aner meaning 'man', with the derivative andreios meaning 'manly' or 'masculine'....
Barbara is a feminine given name derived from the Greek word barbaros (βάρβαρος), meaning "foreign, non-Greek." The word originally mimicked the unintelligible speech of non-Greek peoples (like "bar-bar") and later came...
EtymologyBlanka is a feminine given name used in Croatian, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Slovak, and Slovene. It is a direct cognate of Blanche, ultimately derived from a medieval French nickname meaning "white, fair-coloure...
EtymologyBlaž is a Slovene and Croatian form of Blaise, a name that traces its roots to the Roman name Blasius, which itself derives from the Latin word blaesus meaning "lisping". The name gained widespread popularity du...
Dalibor (Cyrillic: Далибор) is a masculine given name of Slavic origin, common among Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Serbian, Macedonian, and Slovene speakers. It is derived from the Slavic elements dalĭ meaning "distance" and...
Dinko is a South Slavic masculine given name, most commonly used in Croatia. It is a diminutive of Dominic, specifically of the Croatian form Dominko. The name Dominic ultimately derives from the Late Latin name Dominicu...
Dorian is a given name of Greek origin that gained literary fame through Oscar Wilde's 1891 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, a cautionary tale of vanity and moral decay. Wilde likely derived the name from the ancient Gr...
Dražen is a Croatian and Serbian masculine given name, derived from the common Slavic element dorgŭ (South Slavic drag) meaning "precious" or "dear, beloved". Originally a diminutive of names beginning with that element...
Etymology & OriginsElvira is the Spanish form of a Visigothic name first recorded in the 10th century in medieval Spain, appearing in older forms such as Geloyra or Giluira. The etymology remains uncertain, but it is tho...
Emanuela is a feminine given name that serves as the Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian feminine form of Emmanuel. The name Emmanuel ultimately derives from the Hebrew עִמָּנוּאֵל (ʿImmanuʾel), meaning "God is with us," a...
Irena is a feminine given name used in several European languages, primarily in Central, Eastern, and Southern Europe. It is the local form of Irene.EtymologyIrena derives from the Greek name Eirene (Εἰρήνη), which is th...
Jadranko is a Slavic male given name commonly found in Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is derived from the South Slavic word Jadran, meaning "The Adriatic" (referring to the Adr...
Joško is a Croatian diminutive of Josip, the Croatian and Slovene form of Joseph. As a diminutive, it conveys familiarity or endearment, akin to a nickname used within families and close circles. The root name Joseph ult...
Jožica is a Slovene and Croatian feminine form of Joseph. The name is derived from the masculine Jožef (Slovene) and Josip (Croatian), both equivalents of Joseph, and is formed by adding the diminutive suffix -ica, which...
Karlo is a masculine given name used in Croatian, Slovene, and Georgian, serving as a form of Charles. The name Charles ultimately descends from the Germanic name Karl, meaning "man" (from Proto-Germanic *karlaz), or pos...
Katarina is a feminine given name prevalent across several European languages, serving as the standard form of Katherine in Croatian, Serbian, Slovenian, Swedish, Danish, German, Norwegian, Sorbian, and Slovak. Variant s...
EtymologyKazimir is the Croatian, Slovene, and Russian form of the name Casimir, which is a Latinized version of the Polish name Kazimierz. The name is derived from the Slavic elements kaziti meaning "to destroy" and mir...
Krešo is a Croatian masculine given name, typically used as a diminutive or short form of Krešimir, a traditional compound name in the South Slavic onomastic tradition.Etymology and OriginThe root name Krešimir is derive...
Krsto (Cyrillic: Крсто) is a South Slavic masculine given name, predominantly used in Croatian and Serbian. The name is derived from the Serbo-Croatian word krst (крст) meaning "cross"—a term more common in Serbian than...
Ksenija is a feminine given name used primarily in Croatia, Latvia, Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia. It is the local form of Xenia, a name derived from the Greek word xenia, meaning “hospitality.” The name ultimately com...
Lana is a feminine given name of multiple origins, most commonly used as a short form of Alana in English and Svetlana in Russian. The name also appears in Georgian, Croatian, Slovenian, and other Slavic cultures. In the...
Larisa is a feminine given name with deep roots in ancient Greek mythology and history. The name is possibly derived from the ancient city of Larisa in Thessaly, Greece, which meant "citadel". In Greek legends, the nymph...
Lino is a masculine given name in Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Galician, functioning primarily as a short form or variant of Linus. The name ultimately derives from the Greek Linos, which means “flax”. In Greek myth...
Lucija is the Croatian and Slovene form of the name Lucia, derived from the Latin lux, meaning "light." This etymological root conveys the symbolic association of brightness and illumination, which has made the name popu...
Maja is a feminine given name used in Croatian, Danish, German, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Serbian, Slovene, and Swedish. It is a form of the name Maia 1 in various languages, deriving from ancient Greek origins.Etymo...
Mirta is a feminine given name that serves as a cognate of Myrtle in Spanish, Italian, and Croatian. Myrtle itself derives from the English word for the evergreen shrub, ultimately from the Greek μύρτος (myrtos), a name...
Mitar is a Serbian masculine given name, primarily used in Serbia and the region of the former Yugoslavia. It functions as a short form of Dmitar, which itself is the Croatian and Serbian variant of the Greek name Demetr...
Neven is a Slavic masculine given name, used predominantly in Croatia, Serbia, and Macedonia. It is the masculine form of the feminine name Nevena, which in turn derives from the South Slavic word neven meaning "marigold...
Nina is a feminine given name used widely across Europe and beyond, found in Belarusian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Russian, Serbi...
Osama is an alternate transcription of the Arabic name Usama (أسامة), which means "lion" in Arabic. Like many Arabic names drawn from the animal kingdom, Osama evokes qualities of strength, courage, and leadership tradit...
Robert is a masculine given name of ancient Germanic origin, widely used across many languages and cultures for centuries. It derives from the Proto-Germanic *Hrōþiberhtaz, composed of the elements hruod meaning "fame, g...