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Tyasia
|
No established historical meaning; likely a modern blend suggesting a connection to 'Asia' or created as a stylistic feminine name |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tycara
|
Generally interpreted as 'beloved' or 'dear' (from Cara) or 'treasured' if linked to Takara; primarily a modern created name |
English |
Girl |
|
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tycen
|
Modern spelling variant of Tyson - associated with 'son of Ty' or derived from 'tison' meaning 'firebrand' |
English |
Boy |
|
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Tyea
|
Generally linked to Tia ('aunt') or to Tiana/Thea ('princess', 'goddess'); modern usage often just a pleasant given name without a fixed meaning |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyelor
|
Modern spelling variant of Tyler/Taylor - originally occupational: 'maker of tiles' or 'tailor' |
English |
Unisex |
|
|
Tyfany
|
From Greek Theophania, 'manifestation/appearance of God'; associated with the feast of the Epiphany. |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tykara
|
Probable blend: 'Ty' (modern prefix) + 'Kara' (beloved/dear) - roughly 'beloved one' or 'dear one'. |
English |
Girl |
|
|
tylah
|
Modern feminine name - commonly treated as a variant of Tyler ('tile maker, gatekeeper') or of Talia ('dew from God') |
English |
Girl |
|
|
tylar
|
maker or layer of tiles; tile worker |
English |
Unisex |
|
|
Tyler-Xaine
|
Combines Tyler ('tile maker') with Xaine (related to Zane/John, 'God is gracious'); can be read as 'gracious worker' or 'gifted tile maker'. |
English |
Unisex |
|
|
Tylon
|
Modern invented name - essentially 'Ty' with a suffix; generally interpreted as 'son/descendant of Ty' or, if linked to Tyler, 'tile maker' |
English |
Boy |
|
|
Tymar
|
No established traditional meaning; most likely an invented name combining 'Ty' (diminutive of names like Tyler/Timothy) with the suffix '-mar'. |
English |
Boy |
|
|
Tymberlee
|
From 'timber' (wood) + 'lee' (clearing/meadow): 'clearing in the woods' or 'wood meadow' |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tynah
|
A modern variant/diminutive - often linked to Tina (from Christina, 'follower of Christ') or Tiana ('princess'); used as a feminine given name |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyneil
|
A modern blended name combining 'Ty' and 'Neil'; loosely 'son/descendant of Niall' or 'little champion' (Niall: 'champion'/'passionate'). |
English |
Unisex |
|
|
Tynia
|
A modern feminine name likely derived from Tina/Tania; associated meanings include 'follower of Christ' (from Christina) or linkage to the Roman name Tatius (via Tatiana). |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyniah
|
Modern coinage; generally interpreted as a variant of Tania meaning 'fairy queen' or, with '-iah' influence, loosely 'God's gift' or 'Godly' |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tynicia
|
No established historical meaning; a modern invented/variant name - typically treated as a feminine name related to Tanisha/Tynesha |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tynie
|
Diminutive meaning "little" or an affectionate pet form of feminine names; sometimes linked to the River Tyne |
English |
Unisex |
|
|
Tyniecia
|
No established traditional meaning; typically treated as a modern variant of Tynesha/Tynicia and used as a feminine given name. |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tynielle
|
Modern invented name; suggests a feminine blend of 'Ty' and '-nielle' - loosely interpreted as 'little Ty' or, by connection to Danielle, 'God is my judge'. |
English, French |
Girl |
|
|
Tynishia
|
No single traditional meaning; a modern elaboration often associated with 'unique' or 'special' via Anisha or seen as a contemporary given-name form |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyniya
|
Modern invented feminine name; probably a variant of Tania/Taniya or a combination of 'Ty' + 'Nia'. Often associated with Nia (Swahili) meaning 'purpose'. |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyon
|
A modern given name probably derived from Tyrone/Tyron. Ultimately connected to the Irish Tír Eoghain ('land of Eoghan/Owen'), though as used today it functions as a contemporary coinage without a single fixed traditional meaning. |
English |
Boy |
|
|
Tyonne
|
No established historical meaning; a modern invented name often treated as a feminine variant of Tionne/Tyrone or as a creative given name. |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Typhenie
|
Epiphany; manifestation of God |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyree
|
Possibly 'from Tyre' (the ancient city; root often glossed as 'rock') or 'of Tiree' (Scottish island); also used as a modern personal name without a single fixed meaning. |
English, Gaelic, Scottish |
Boy |
|
|
Tyrel
|
From a Norman surname meaning "to pull" or figuratively "stubborn" |
English |
Boy |
|
|
Tyresa
|
Variant of Teresa, generally taken to mean "harvester" or "to harvest" |
English |
Girl |
|
|
Tyrian
|
Of Tyre; from the ancient city of Tyre; associated with Tyrian purple (royal purple dye) |
English |
Boy |
|