Starting with letter C
# | Name | Origin | Meaning | Gender | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
961 | Claudine | English | Feminine of Claude. | F | |
962 | Claudine | French | A feminine form of Claud, a variant of the Latin Claudius meaning lame. Famous bearer: Claudine was the heroine of a series of novels by 20th-century French author Colette. Lame. | F | |
963 | Claudine | German | Feminine of Claude. | F | |
964 | Clea | Greek | Abbreviation of Clotilde and Cleopatra. | F | |
965 | Cleantha | English | Glory. | F | |
966 | Clematis | Greek | Flower name. | F | |
967 | Clemence | English | Variant of Clementia used as a virtue name by the Puritans, associated with the abstract virtue of clemency. | F | |
968 | Clemence | French | Clemency; mercy. Clemence was the mythological Roman goddess of pity. | F | |
969 | Clemence | Latin | Variant of Clementia: Mildness, clemency, mercy. Famous bearer: Clemence was the mythological Roman goddess of pity. | F | |
970 | Clemency | English | Variant of Clementia used as a virtue name by the Puritans, associated with the abstract virtue of clemency. | F | |
971 | Clemency | Latin | Variant of Clementia: Mildness, clemency, mercy. Famous bearer: Clemence was the mythological Roman goddess of pity. | F | |
972 | Clementia | Latin | Mildness. The name Clementia was borne by the Roman goddess of mercy. Clementia and its variants have been used occasionally in Britain since the Middle Ages, hut are uncommon in modern times. | F | |
973 | Clementina | French | Variant of Clemence meaning clemency, mercy. | F | |
974 | Clementina | German | Feminine form of the Latin Clement. | F | |
975 | Clementina | Latin | Feminine form of Clement: From 'clemens' meaning mild or merciful. | F | |
976 | Clementina | Spanish | Merciful. | F | |
977 | Clementine | French | Variant of Clemence meaning clemency, mercy. | F | |
978 | Clementine | German | Feminine form of the Latin Clement. Famous bearers of the name Clementine: the heroine of the well-known folk song 'Clementine' and the Sir Winston Churchill's wife. | F | |
979 | Clementine | Latin | Feminine form of Clement: From 'clemens' meaning mild or merciful. | F | |
980 | Cleo | Greek | A diminutive of Cleopatra and Clotilde, meaning famed. Famous bearer: 20th century British jazz singer Cleo Laine. | F |