Baby Names That Mean Victory

95 baby names meaning victory — with origins, popularity, and audio pronunciation on every name.

Looking for a name that means victory? Here are 95 baby names whose meaning carries the sense of victory. Each links to its full page with a sourced meaning and audio pronunciation.

Girl Names

Victoria#54 in the U.S.Victory; from Latin victoriaNyla#236 in the U.S.Winner; achiever of purpose; possibly from Arabic nayl (attaining a goal, success) or an anglicColette#316 in the U.S.French feminine diminutive of Nicolas, itself from the Greek Nikolaos, composed of 'nike' (victLaura#379 in the U.S.From Latin laurus, the laurel tree, a symbol of victory, honor, and poetry in classical antiquiNicole#383 in the U.S.French feminine form of Nicholas, from Greek Nikolaos meaning victory of the people, combining Veronica#427 in the U.S.From Latin Veronica, possibly a Latinization of Greek Berenice meaning she who brings victory; Kelsey#814 in the U.S.Derived from the Old English place name Ceolsige or Celchyth, interpreted as 'Cenel's island' oKollyns#905 in the U.S.Modern feminine variant of Collins, an English surname derived from Colin, a medieval diminutivLauryn#1110 in the U.S.Laurel; victory; a spelling variant of Lauren, from Latin Laurentius (from Laurentum, the city Tori#1412 in the U.S.Bird; also victory as a Victoria short formZaya#1420 in the U.S.Victory, success, triumphantDiamond#1612 in the U.S.From the gemstone, via Latin 'diamas' from Greek 'adamas' ('unconquerable, hardest metal'), givRumani#1814 in the U.S.Goddess of Victory: Nikke!Aashvi#1860 in the U.S.Blessed and victoriousEunice#1967 in the U.S.Good victoryNicolette#2020 in the U.S.French feminine diminutive of Nicole/Nicholas, from Greek 'nike' (victory) and 'laos' (people):Jaya#2367 in the U.S.victory, triumphKinsey#2391 in the U.S.royal victory meadowCollyns#2438 in the U.S.son of Nicholas, victorious peopleCollette#2716 in the U.S.Victory of the peopleVittoria#2875 in the U.S.VictoryNicolle#3033 in the U.S.Feminine form of Nicolas, from Greek 'Nikolaos': 'nike' (victory) + 'laos' (people), meaning 'vVeronika#3038 in the U.S.From Latin 'vera icon' (true image) linked to the Christian legend of the Veil of Veronica; alsNika#3149 in the U.S.Derived from the Greek 'nikē', meaning 'victory'; used as a stand-alone name across Slavic EuroStefany#3156 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Stephanie, from Greek 'Stephanos', meaning 'crown' or 'wreath', a symbol ofNichole#3358 in the U.S.Victory of the people; variant of Nicole, the French feminine of Nicholas, from Greek NikolaosNikki#3426 in the U.S.Pet form of Nicole and Nicola, from Greek Nikolaos, 'victory of the people'Lora#3539 in the U.S.Variant of Laura — from Latin laurus, the laurel of victory and honorKhai#3670 in the U.S.Vietnamese 'victory, triumph, to open/unfold'; also a modern spelling of Kai, used for girlsBerenice#3755 in the U.S.From Greek Berenike (Macedonian form of Pherenike), 'bringer of victory' — borne by Ptolemaic qFaiza#3763 in the U.S.Feminine of Faiz — Arabic 'victorious, successful, one who attains' — a classic across the MuslBernice#3821 in the U.S.Contracted form of Berenice — Greek Pherenike, 'bringer of victory' — a New Testament nameLareen#3846 in the U.S.Readable as a Laurene/Larine variant — Latin 'laurel, victory' — or the modern Arabic girls' naSigrid#3866 in the U.S.From Old Norse Sigríðr — sigr, 'victory', plus fríðr, 'beautiful, fair' — 'beautiful victory'Victory#3872 in the U.S.From the English word victory — Latin victoria, 'conquest, triumph' — a bold virtue word-nameKelsea#3914 in the U.S.-ea spelling of Kelsey — from an Old English name/place read as 'ship's victory' or 'Cenel's isCairo#3965 in the U.S.From Arabic al-Qahira, 'the victorious' — Egypt's capital, named for Mars the conqueror; here f

Boy Names

Vincent#107 in the U.S.Conquering; prevailing — from Latin Vincentius, from vincere (to conquer)Nicholas#112 in the U.S.Victory of the people — from Greek Nikolaos, from nike (victory) + laos (people)Lorenzo#117 in the U.S.From Laurentum, an ancient Italian city; associated with the laurel tree symbolizing honor and Nico#174 in the U.S.Victory of the people; short form of Nicholas (Greek Nikolaos: nike + laos)Nicolas#177 in the U.S.Victory of the peopleVictor#211 in the U.S.Conqueror; victor; from Latin victor (conqueror), from vincere (to conquer)Kairo#226 in the U.S.Victorious; variant of Cairo, from Arabic al-Qāhira (the victorious/overpowering)Colson#311 in the U.S.Son of Cole; Cole being a medieval short form of Nicholas (victory of the people)Niko#325 in the U.S.Short form of Nikolaos or Nikola, from the Greek 'nike' (victory) and 'laos' (people), meaning Cairo#341 in the U.S.From the Arabic Al-Qahira, meaning 'the victorious' or 'the conqueror', a name associated with Colin#343 in the U.S.In Scottish Gaelic, Colin is a diminutive of Cailean (young dog, youth, or pup). In English usaStephen#383 in the U.S.From Greek Stephanos meaning crown or garland, the symbol of victory and honor in classical antJay#392 in the U.S.Used as a given name from the bird name jay (from Old French jai), or as a short form of names Nasir#487 in the U.S.From Arabic 'nasara' meaning to help, to give victory, or to protect; Nasir means 'helper,' 'onCollin#493 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Colin; from Scottish Gaelic 'Cailean' meaning young warrior or pup; also usLawrence#520 in the U.S.From the Latin Laurentius, meaning 'man from Laurentum,' an ancient city near Rome; the city naVicente#589 in the U.S.Spanish and Portuguese form of Vincent, from Latin Vincentius, derived from vincere meaning 'toNikolai#605 in the U.S.Russian form of Nicholas, from Greek Nikolaos, composed of nike ('victory') and laos ('people')Vincenzo#674 in the U.S.Italian form of Vincent, from Latin Vincentius, derived from vincere meaning to conquer or to wNikolas#719 in the U.S.Variant spelling of Nicholas, from the Greek Nikolaos (Νικόλαος), a compound of nike (victory) Nixon#873 in the U.S.Son of Nicholas; from the medieval English short form Nick (of Nicholas: victory of the people)Aariv#1065 in the U.S.Possibly from Hebrew ariv (arising, noble) or from Sanskrit ariv (enemy-conqueror); exact etymoLarry#1068 in the U.S.Laurel; victory; English pet form of Lawrence or Laurence, from Latin Laurentius (from LaurentuKole#1200 in the U.S.Coal; dark; swarthy; K-spelling variant of Cole, from Middle English col (charcoal, coal) or a Niklaus#1232 in the U.S.Victory of the people, people's triumphViktor#1276 in the U.S.Victor, conqueror, one who winsNikko#1289 in the U.S.Victory of the people; sun and lightJai#1307 in the U.S.Victory, triumph, successZiggy#1358 in the U.S.Victorious protector; victory and protectionNick#1418 in the U.S.Victory of the peopleVince#1452 in the U.S.Conquering, victoriousNickolas#1549 in the U.S.Victory of the peopleNikola#1594 in the U.S.a Slavic and South Slavic form of Nicholas, from Greek 'Nikolaos', combining 'nike' ('victory')Fateh#2189 in the U.S.ConquerorLaurence#2196 in the U.S.From Laurentum; ultimately from Latin laurus (laurel), symbol of victory.Nayel#2199 in the U.S.Attainer, achiever, winner; from Arabic root n-y-l (to attain, acquire).Kaiyr#2287 in the U.S.victorious, goodAshvik#2336 in the U.S.Brave; victorious; winner; from Sanskrit ashva (horse — symbolizing speed and power) + vik (relCael#2369 in the U.S.Slender; victorious people; from Irish Gaelic Cael (slender, narrow) or a variant of Caelum (LaKlaus#2405 in the U.S.Victory of the people; German short form of Nikolaus (Greek Nikolaos: nike victory + laos peoplAjay#2435 in the U.S.Invincible; unconquered; from Sanskrit Ajay (a: not + jay: victory/conquer — one who cannot be Diamond#2443 in the U.S.The hardest gem; invincible; from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamas/diamintem, froLarson#2453 in the U.S.Son of Lars; from Scandinavian Larsson/Larsen (son of Lars, the Scandinavian form of Laurence fNicolai#2581 in the U.S.victory of the peopleNikolaos#2772 in the U.S.Victory of the peopleNilan#2977 in the U.S.Champion or winner; an anglicization of the Irish Gaelic Niallán, a diminutive of Niall meaningNicodemus#3360 in the U.S.Victory of the people; from Greek nike, 'victory', and demos, 'people' — the Pharisee who came Nicola#3361 in the U.S.Italian masculine form of Nicholas, from Greek Nikolaos, 'victory of the people'Nasser#3427 in the U.S.Victorious, granting victory; from the Arabic root n-s-r, famous through Egyptian president GamNassir#3428 in the U.S.Helper, supporter, defender; double-s spelling of Nasir, from the Arabic root for aid and victoNikita#3430 in the U.S.Russian masculine name from Greek Aniketos, 'unconquered, unconquerable'Jayan#3477 in the U.S.Victory, victorious; from Sanskrit jaya, 'victory' — also read as a modern Jay- elaborationKhairo#3552 in the U.S.Readable as a spelling of Cairo — Arabic al-Qahira, 'the victorious' — or built on Arabic khairArhan#3597 in the U.S.From Sanskrit arhan/arhat, 'worthy, deserving' — a being who has conquered inner enemies, reverNikolaus#3742 in the U.S.German form of Nicholas — Greek Nikolaos, nike, 'victory', plus laos, 'people'Vittorio#3768 in the U.S.Italian form of Victor — Latin victor, 'conqueror' — kings' and directors' favoriteKhyro#3841 in the U.S.Kh-styled Kyro — the Cairo ('the victorious') echo-coinage; not firmly fixedChamp#3893 in the U.S.Clip of champion — Latin campio, 'field-fighter' — the victory nickname given outright

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