Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Yamadera JapaneseYama means "mountain, hill" and dera comes from
tera meaning "temple".
Yamagata JapaneseFrom Japanese 山
(yama) meaning "mountain" and 形
(gata) meaning "shape, form" or 縣
(gata) meaning "county, district".
Yamaha Japanese (Rare)This Japanese surname is more found in Brazil than Japan, because of Japanese immigrants who immigrated from Japan to Brazil. Notable bearer of this surname: Torakusu Yamaha (Japanese entrepreneur who was the founder of the Yamaha Corporation).
Yamahata JapaneseFrom 山 (
yama) meaning "mountain, hill" and 端 (
hata) meaning "tip, edge, end".
Yamai JapaneseYama means "mountain" and i means "well, mineshaft, pit".
Yamakado JapaneseFrom 山 (
yama) meaning "mountain, hill" and 角 (
kado) meaning "horn, corner" or 門 (
kado) meaning "gate".
Yamal MuslimFrom a personal name based on Arabic
jamāl ‘beauty, grace’. This name is also found in compounds such as
Jamāl ad-Dīn ‘beauty of religion’... [
more]
Yamamori JapaneseFrom Japanese 山 (
yama) meaning "mountain, hill" and 森 (
mori) meaning "forest".
Yaman TurkishMeans "intelligent, capable, efficient" in Turkish.
Yamanobe JapaneseFrom Japanese 山
(yama) meaning "mountain", 野
(no) meaning "field, wilderness" and 辺
(be) meaning "area, place, vicinity".
Yamanoue JapaneseYama means "mountain", no is a possessive article, and ue means "above, top, upper".
Yamasato JapaneseThis surname combines 山 (san, sen, yama) meaning "mountain" and 里 (ri, sato) meaning "league, parent's home, ri (unit of distance - equal to 3.927 km), village," 県 or 縣 - outdated variant of 県 - (ken, ka.keru) meaning "county, district, subdivision, prefecture," the last meaning reserved for 県.... [
more]
Yamauba Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 山姥 (
yamauba/yamamba) meaning "mountain hag", referring to someone with mountain hag-like traits.
Yamawaki JapaneseFrom 山 (
yama, sen) meaning "mountain, hill", and 脇 (
waki) meaning "armpit, side, flank, underarm".
Yamikawa JapaneseFrom Japanese 闇 (Yami) meaning "darkness" 川(Kawa) meaning "river", the name basically means "Dark river"
Yamura JapaneseFrom 矢 (
ya) meaning "arrow" and 村 (
mura) meaning "village".
Yan ChineseFrom Chinese 严
(yán) referring to the ancient fief of Yan Jun (嚴君) that existed in what is now Sichuan province.
Yan ChineseFrom Chinese 阎
(yán) meaning "gate", also referring to a fief that existed in the ancient state of Jin in what is now Shanxi province.
Yan ChineseFrom Chinese 颜
(yán) meaning "face, countenance", also referring to the ancient fief of Yan that existed during the Western Zhou dynasty in what is now Shandong province.
Yanabu JapaneseFrom 柳 (
yana) meaning "willow" and 父 (
bu) meaning "father".
Yanagida JapaneseFrom Japanese 柳
(yanagi) meaning "willow" and 田
(ta) meaning "field, rice paddy".
Yanai JapaneseFrom the Japanese 矢 (
ya) "arrow" and 内 (
nai or
uchi) "inside."
Yanase JapaneseFrom Japanese 柳 (
yana) meaning "willow" or 簗 (
yana) meaning "fish trap" combines with 瀬 (
se) meaning "torrent, ripple, rapids, current".... [
more]
Yandarov ChechenPossibly from the given name
Yandar, which is of uncertain meaning, perhaps of Turkic or Iranian origin.
Yano JapaneseFrom Japanese 矢
(ya) meaning "arrow" and 野
(no) meaning "field, wilderness".
Yanong FilipinoYanong in Tagalog can mean "that kind" or "that sort".It can also be a regional name from local dialects and cultures.
Yanqi ChineseYanqi is/ was a county of China. It is also the surname of Mao Yanqi, also known as VAVA.
Yanson FilipinoFrom Hokkien 燕孫
(iàn-sun), derived from 燕
(iàn) meaning "swallow (bird)" and 孫
(sun) meaning "grandchild".
Yao ChineseFrom Chinese 姚
(yáo) meaning "handsome, elegant".
Yaoyorozu Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 八 (ya) meaning "eight", 百 (o) meaning "one hundred", and 万 (yorozu) meaning "ten thousand"
Yapp EnglishFrom a nickname for a clever or cunning person, derived from Middle English
yap "deceitful, shrewd", from Old English
geap "crooked, bent, curved".
Yarbrough EnglishHabitational name derived from
Yarborough or
Yarburgh in Lincolnshire, England, both composed of Old English
eorþe "earth, ground, dirt" and
burg "fortress, citadel, stronghold".
Yardley EnglishHabitational name for someone from any of the various locations in England named Yardley, derived from Old English
gierd meaning "branch, twig, pole, stick" and
leah meaning "wood, clearing".
Yardy EnglishThe most likely origin of this surname is that it was used to denote someone who held a piece of land known as a "yarde", from the Middle English word "yerd".
Yari JapaneseFrom the kanji 槍, meaning spear. Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Yarmolenko UkrainianRegional name for someone from Yarmolyntsi, an urban-type settlement in Ukraine.
Yarwood Englishhabitational name from Yarwood Heath in Rostherne Cheshire earlier Yarwode. The placename derives from Old English
earn "eagle" or
gear "yair enclosure for catching fish" and
wudu "wood".
Yashin RussianMeans "son of
Yasha". This surname was borne by the Soviet soccer goalkeeper Lev Yashin (1929-1990).
Yasohachi Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 八十八 (
yasohachi), the characters broken down from a single character 米 (
kome) meaning "rice".
Yasue JapaneseFrom Japanese 安
(yasu) meaning "inexpensive, rested, peace, quiet" and 江
(e) meaning "bay, inlet".
Yasuhiko JapaneseYasu means "peace, even, level, cheap, inexpensive, relax" and hiko means "prince".
Yasuhiro JapaneseFrom Japanese 安 (
yasu) meaning "peace, quiet" combined with 央 (
hiro) meaning "centre, middle". Other Kanji combinations are possible.
Yasui JapaneseFrom Japanese 安 (
yasu) meaning "calm, peaceful, tranquil" and 井 (
i) meaning "well, mine shaft, pit".
Yasumatsu JapaneseYasu means "relax, peaceful, cheap, inexpensive" and matsu means "pine, fir tree".
Yasumi JapaneseYasu meaning 安 (
yasu) meaning "rest, peace, cheap, relax" and 己 (
mi) meaning "oneself".
Yasura Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 安良 (
Yasura) meaning "Yasura", a former village in the former district of Izushi in the former Japanese province of Tajima in parts of present-day Hyōgo, Japan.
Yasutomi JapaneseYasu means "relax, cheap, peace" and tomi means "wealth, abundance".
Yatabe JapaneseFrom 谷 (
ya) meaning "valley" or 矢 (
ya) meaning "arrow", 田 (
ta) meaning "rice paddy, field", and 部 (
be) meaning "section, bureau, division".
Yatsuka JapaneseFrom Japanese 八
(ya) meaning "eight" and 束
(tsuka) meaning "bundle, bunch, sheaf".
Yavari PersianDerived from Persian یاور
(yavar) meaning "assistant, supporter".
Yaw Irish, English, ChineseIrish: reduced and altered Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Eochadha Chinese : Cantonese variant of
Qiu.
Yaxley EnglishFrom the names of two places in Suffolk and Cambridgeshire, both derived from Old English
geac "cuckoo" and
leah "woodland, clearing".
Yayla TurkishMeans "mountain pasture, highland, plateau" in Turkish.
Yaylacıoğlu TurkishMeans "descendant of the nomad" from Turkish
yaylacı meaning "nomad, highlander, transhumant".