From German Dorn "thorn" and Rose "rose" combined with the diminutive suffix -chen. This is the name of Sleeping Beauty in the Brothers Grimm telling of the fairy tale.
Derived from the Old German elements agil "edge, blade" and mari "famous". Egilmar (or Elimar) was the name of two counts of Oldenburg in the 12th century.
Elanur
Gender:Feminine
Usage: Turkish
Means "hazel light", from Turkish ela meaning "hazel" combined with Arabic نور (nūr) meaning "light".
From the English noble title Lady, derived from Old English hlæfdige, originally meaning "bread kneader". This name grew in popularity in Latin America after the marriage of Diana Spencer, known as Lady Di, to Prince Charles in 1981 and her death in 1997.
From the earlier form Loherangrin, derived from Lothringen, the German name for the region of Lorraine. It appears in Arthurian legend, initially in the 13th-century German poem Parzival by Wolfram von Eschenbach, belonging to a son of the knight Parzival. The tales were adapted by Richard Wagner for his opera Lohengrin (1850).
Loherangrin
Gender:Masculine
Usage: Arthurian Cycle
Form of Lohengrin used by the 13th-century German poet Wolfram von Eschenbach.
Mago
Gender:Masculine
Usage: Phoenician (Latinized)
Other Scripts:𐤌𐤂𐤍(Phoenician)
From the Punic name 𐤌𐤂𐤍 (Magon) possibly meaning "shield"[1]. This name was borne by three kings of Carthage, and also by a brother of Hannibal Barca.
Means "rose red" in German, used in the Brothers Grimm folktale Schneeweißchen und Rosenrot (English translation Snow-White and Rose-Red). In the tale Rosenrot and her sister Schneeweißchen befriend a bear who has been cursed by an evil dwarf.
Ry
Gender:Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced:RIE
Short form of Ryan and other names beginning with Ry.
Schneeweißchen
Gender:Feminine
Usage: Literature
Means "snow white" in High German, thus a cognate of Low German Sneewittchen (see Snow White). This is the name of a peasant girl in the German folktale Snow-White and Rose-Red, recorded by the Brothers Grimm in 1837. Her sister is Rosenrot, translated into English as Rose-Red. This story is distinct from the Grimms' earlier tale Snow White.
From Sanskrit सुख (sukha) "happiness, pleasure" and राम (rāma), the name of the Hindu god Rama 1.
Svetlozara
Gender:Feminine
Usage: Bulgarian
A dithematic name composed from the Slavic name element světŭ "light" and an unidentified second part.
Telman
Gender:Masculine
Usage: Azerbaijani
Soviet-era name derived from the usual Azerbaijani spelling of the surname of the German communist party leader Ernst Thälmann (1886-1944; see Thälmann).
In medieval German literature, this is the name of the eponymous character of the epic poem Willehalm (13th century) written by the German poet Wolfram von Eschenbach (died around 1220).
Williamina
Gender:Feminine
Usage: Scottish
Feminine form of William. A famous bearer of this name was Williamina Fleming (1857-1911), a Scottish astronomer.
Wolfdietrich
Gender:Masculine
Usage: Literature, German (Rare)
Compound of Wolf and Dietrich. Wolfdietrich is the title hero of a 13th-century Middle High German epic poem. By some traditions he is the grandfather of the more famous hero Dietrich von Bern.
Wolfhard
Gender:Masculine
Usage: German
Pronounced:VAWLF-hart
Derived from the Old German element wolf meaning "wolf" combined with hart meaning "hard, firm, brave, hardy".
Wulfila
Gender:Masculine
Usage: Gothic (Hypothetical) [1]
Other Scripts:𐍅𐌿𐌻𐍆𐌹𐌻𐌰(Gothic)
Means "little wolf", from a diminutive of the Gothic element wulfs. This was the name of a 4th-century Gothic bishop and missionary. He translated the New Testament into Gothic.