Awesome Polish Names

  1. Urban
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "of the city"
    • Description:

      Urban was not an uncommon name through the 1930s (rising as high as Number 435), having been attached to several saints and early popes, but it has completely disappeared from the landscape--both urban and rural. Yet in this era of word name appreciation and trend for 'an'-ending boys' names, we're thinking it might be ready for a return.
  2. Urszula
    • Walentyna
      • Waleria
        • Wera
          • Wilhelm
            • Origin:

              German variation of William
            • Meaning:

              "resolute protection"
            • Description:

              This dignified German form of William belonged to two German Emperors and Kings of Prussia, as well as a host of other important historical figures. These include composer (Wilhelm) Richard Wagner, philosophers Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, and physicist Wilhelm Roentgen, who discovered the X-ray. It now sounds rather dated in Germany, however, having dropped out of the Top 20 there in the late 1920s and continuing to decline since.
          • Wilhelmina
            • Origin:

              German, feminine variation of Wilhelm
            • Meaning:

              "resolute protection"
            • Description:

              Wilhelmina was long burdened with the Old Dutch cleanser image of thick blond braids and clunky wooden clogs, but that started to be changed somewhat by the dynamic Vanessa Williams character on Ugly Betty, and even further by the choice of Wilhelmina by ace baby namers Natalie and Taylor Hanson. For the less adventurous, Willa is, for now, still a more user-friendly female equivalent of William.
          • Weronika
            • Wiktor
              • Wiktoria
                • Wiola
                  • Wioleta
                    • Zofia
                      • Origin:

                        Czech, Polish, and Ukrainian variation of Sophia
                      • Meaning:

                        "wisdom"
                      • Description:

                        As Sophia gets more popular, parents search out more unusual spins, and the Z makes this qualify.
                    • Zosia
                      • Origin:

                        Variant of Sophia, Greek
                      • Meaning:

                        "wisdom"
                      • Description:

                        This unusual and alluring choice was used by David Mamet for his daughter, who is now grown and an actress on the hit show Girls.
                    • Zuzanna
                      • Origin:

                        Slavic variation of Susannah
                      • Meaning:

                        "lily"
                      • Description:

                        Remember Zuzu, the adorable little girl you watch every Christmas in "It's a Wonderful Life"? Here's a direct path to that nickname, a lot more zesty than the more familiar Susannah.
                    • Zygfryd
                      • Zachariasz
                        • Zoja
                          • Łukasz
                            • Żaklina