The name was invented during the Soviet Period, invented in honour of the 1917 Revolution. There is an old Soviet film (1924) entitled the Adventures of Oktyabrina. The name experienced some usage throughout the Soviet Union between the 1920-1960s, now it is obsolete.
A short form Okta.
The name was borne by Oktyabrina Bolotova, a Mongolian-Russian Olympic archer. It is also the name of a town in Magadanskaya Oblast Russia.
The name is sometime transliterated is Oktjabrina and Oktiabrina.
Masculine versions Oktyaber, Oktyabrin and Oktyabrist.
Winslet is a modern English feminine given name transferred from a surname of uncertain origin. Its use as a first name rose directly in association with British actress Kate Winslet (b. 1975), whose international fame in the late 1990s and early 2000s made the name sound elegant, contemporary, and literary. Its growing appeal is also reinforced by the popularity of other names ending in –et, such as Scarlett,Juliet, and Violet.
The surname Winslet itself is rare and somewhat enigmatic. Most onomastic sources suggest it derives from the Old English place-name Winslade, which is composed of Wynn/Winn (an Anglo-Saxon personal male name meaning “joy” or “friend”) and slæd (“valley, glade”).
It’s usage as a given-name appears sporadically in historical records; two early American examples include a female Winslet born in Texas in 1915 and a male Winslett born in Georgia the same year. As a given name, however, Winslet is distinctly contemporary.
Since 2021, at least 6 females have been given this name in England and Wales, while in the United States, usage started in 2013, and since then, it has been given 171 times. It is still a rare name but one to look out for the next decade.
Winslet carries a soft yet sophisticated aura—romantic, feminine, and subtly pre-Raphaelite. Its cadence recalls the charm of Victorian poetry and English landscapes, offering a fresh alternative to Scarlett or Juliet with an undercurrent of modern elegance.
It has a unisex feel but has thus far been only used on females; of unknown meaning, the name became familiar in the United Kingdom after the launch of the lingerie brand Boux Avenue in 2011, founded by British entrepreneur Theo Paphitis. According to Paphitis, he was inspired by the name of a French waitress who served him while he was on holiday in France. The brand name has since taken on a fashionable, feminine association, and a handful of girls in the U.K. have been given the name since 2012.
Although sometimes claimed to derive from the French surnames Leboux (unverified meaning “the ox pasture”) or Lebeau (“the handsome”), there is no linguistic evidence connecting Boux to either. French dictionaries and surname registers list Leboux as an existing family name but do not support these specific etymologies, and the form Boux itself does not appear in older French usage as a given name.
In all likelihood, Boux is a modern invented name inspired by French phonetics—short, chic, and evocative of elegance—rather than a historically attested French word or surname.
Lenar and Lenara originated as 20th-century Soviet neologisms, coined from the phrase Ленинская армия (Leninskaya armya), meaning “Lenin’s army.” Such ideological names were created to reflect Soviet ideals and to replace traditional religious names across the USSR.
Unlike many other revolutionary inventions that faded after the fall of the Soviet Union, Lenar, Lenara and its offshoots of Linar/Linara endured among Tatars and other Central Asian peoples. Their survival is often attributed to their smooth, cross-cultural sound and to later folk etymologies that link them with the Arabic root nūr (“light”) or the Persian nār (“fire”). Some modern South Asian baby name sites have also applied the meaning “born of beauty,” from Arabic but this is not accurate.
In recent years, these names have also spread to South Asian Muslim communities, largely due to the mistaken belief that they stem from Arabic or Persian origins rather than from Soviet linguistic invention.
It comes directly from the Latin and English geographical term Nubia, referring to the ancient region along the Nile south of Egypt — roughly modern northern Sudan and southern Egypt.
The etymology of the place name itself is is from the Ancient Egyptian word, nwb or nub (gold).
The use of Nubia as a personal name arose much later, during the Romantic and colonial periods of the 18th–19th centuries in England, when exotic place-names like Asia, India, Arabia, and Persia began to be used for girls.
In the 20th century, the name gained renewed use in Latin America, particularly in Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, and Mexico, where Núbia or Nubia became moderately common among women born in the 1940s–1970s. It was further popularized in the 1950s by Brazilian singer Núbia Lafayete (1937-2007), whose birth name was Idenilde Araújo Alves da Costa.
In the United States, Nubia experienced a revival among African Americans during the late 1960s, part of a broader cultural movement that embraced African place-names and heritage-inspired names.
Noraiz (also spelled Nooraiz, Norayz, or Noraz) is a modern Urdu masculine name used primarily in Pakistan and among the South-Asian Muslim diaspora.
Although often described online as an Arabic or Persian name meaning “sunray,” “rays of light,” or “radiant sunlight,” it does not appear in any classical Arabic or Persian dictionaries such as Lisān al-ʿArab or Tāj al-ʿArūs. Instead, it is a modern Urdu coinage inspired by Arabic elements and folk etymology.
The first part, Noor / Nūr (نور), is authentic Arabic meaning light, radiance, illumination. The second element, -aiz / -ayz / -eiz (ایز), has no independent meaning in Arabic or Persian, but it resembles Urdu-Persian poetic suffixes (like -āz or -āy) and may have been created for sound and beauty.
The name first appears in records as a feminine given-name in England as early as the 1800s. It seems to be based on ocean or an offshoot of Oceana, nickname Ocie, which was somewhat in vogue around the same time period.
It has since been sporadically used in the U.K. and the United States. Since 1996, less than a dozen girls have been given this name in the U.K. In the U.S., it was given to 22 females total between 1895-1921.
The name may be inspired by the Arabic word, جَوْھَرَة (jauhara), meaning, “gem; jewel.” They do look and sound eerily similar. It has also been speculated to be a corruption of the Hebrew female name, Yakira יַקִירָה (precious).
The earliest records I can find stem from Venezuala in the 1940s. Venezuela did experience some Middle Eastern immigration, so it is possible that this name is a modern Spanish corruption of the Arabic female name Juwayriya, which stems from the same above mentioned Arabic word.
It was further popularized in the rest of the Spanish-speaking world by Venezuelan actress, Yajaira Orta (b. 1951) and Venezuelan model, selected Miss Venezuela winner in 1988, Yajaira Vera (b. 1963).
In the United States, Yajaira appeared in the U.S. top 1000 girls’ names between 1989-2001. It never got past the 900s, ranking at its very highest at the #916 spot in 1996. This was the same year a Chilean band of the same was hitting the Spanish-speaking music charts with their eponymous album.
Its alternate form of Yahaira appeared once in the U.S. top 1000 in 2003 and appeared one other time in 2006, peaking at #831 in 2003.
The name Apple is taken directly from the English word for the fruit — a symbol of beauty, love, temptation, and knowledge in Western tradition.
The word itself comes from Old English æppel, ultimately derived from Proto-Germanic aplaz, which originally meant any kind of fruit rather than specifically the apple. Cognates appear throughout the Germanic family — Apfel (German), appel (Dutch), äpple (Swedish) — making it one of the oldest recorded words in those languages.
As a given name, Apple belongs to the small but enduring tradition of English word names, especially those tied to nature, purity, or symbolic meaning. It has been in use in the Philippines since the 1960s, long before Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin decided to bestow this on their daughter in 2004.
Though it has been used as a given-name until recently, foreign cognates have been used since Medieval times, such as Pomona (a Roman goddess), Poma (Italian), Pomme (French) andPomeline.
It may have also been occasionally used as a diminutive form of Apollonia or Apolline.
Sweet, simple, and loaded with myth — Apple is a name that turns something ordinary into a symbol of beauty and curiosity. It bridges innocence and rebellion, Eden and the avant-garde.
Moonglow is an English word-name that combines moon with glow — literally evoking the silvery, luminous light cast by the moon. The phrase became popular in the 20th century, used in poetry, music, and art to capture a sense of romance, mystery, and nighttime beauty.
Moonglow was the title of a popular jazz tune (1934) covered by Benny Goodman, Billie Holiday, and others.
The phrase is also used in fantasy and sci-fi literature to describe magical illumination or lunar radiance.