Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
ArafukaJapanese From Japanese 荒 (ara) meaning "uncultivated, desolate" and 深 (fuka) meaning "deep; profound". It may have been derived from Ara 2.
BasistyRussian Derived from Russian басистый (basisty) meaning "having bass, deep voice".
BrinkLow German, Dutch, Swedish, Danish The Dutch and Low German meaning is "village green". In Danish and Swedish, the name is thought to be a borrowing of Middle Dutch brinc / brink, meaning "grassy edge" or perhaps "slope",, and the Danish word now means "where the water runs deep".
DebbieEnglish It comes from Dibden meaning "deep valley".
DebbyEnglish "Deep valley" from Old English Dipden.
FukayaJapanese From Japanese 深 (fuka) meaning "deep" and 谷 (ya) meaning "valley".
FukazawaJapanese From Japanese 深 (fuka) meaning "deep" and 沢 or 澤 (sawa) meaning "marsh".
HolcombEnglish Habitational name from any of various places, for example in Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Greater Manchester, Oxfordshire, and Somerset, so named from Old English hol meaning "hollow", "sunken", "deep" + cumb meaning "valley".
HoldenEnglish, Irish habitational name from one or more of various places so named especially Holden in Haslingden (Lancashire) but also Holden in Bolton and Holden in Silsden (both Yorkshire) Holedean Farm in Henfield and Holden in Rotherfield (both Sussex) Holding Farm in Cheriton and Woolding Farm in Whitchurch (Hampshire) and Holden in Southborough (Kent)... [more]
HuyềnVietnamese From Sino-Vietnamese 玄 (huyền) meaning "deep, profound, mysterious, black".
HyunKorean From Sino-Korean 玄 (hyeon) meaning "deep, profound, mysterious".
IwabuchiJapanese From Japanese 岩 (iwa) meaning "cliff, rocks" and 渕 or 淵 (fuchi) meaning "abyss, edge, deep pool".
KhumpiraphanThai From Thai คัมภีร (khampira) meaning "deep; profound" and พันธุ์ (phan) meaning "breed; species; lineage".
MiyamaJapanese From Japanese 宮 (miya) meaning "temple, shrine, palace" and 間 (ma) meaning "among, between". It can also be formed from 美 (mi) meaning "beautiful" or 深 (mi) meaning "deep, profound" and 山 (yama) meaning "mountain, hill".