Georgy (/ɡiːɒrɡiː/; Russian: Георгий, romanized: Georgiy; Bulgarian: Георги, romanized: Georgi) is a Slavic masculine given name, derived from the Greek name Georgios. It corresponds to the English name George.
Юрій (Yurii [ˈjur⁽ʲ⁾ij]), Георгій (Heorhii [ɦeˈɔrɦij]), Єгор (Yehor [jeˈɦɔr]), equivalent to George, of Greek origin.
Yuri is a baby boy name of Russian origin meaning “farmer”. This name is commonly associated with the Greek name George and is found in Hebrew, Japanese, and Korean cultures. However, if you journey through space and time, the name Yuri is actually famous because of Yuri Gagarin.
Let's see how Giorgos is spelled in other languages: English: George; Arabic: Girgis; Basque: Gorka; Bulgarian: Georgi; French: Georges; German: Georg, Jörg, Jürgen, Jörgen; Georgian: გიორგი (Giorgi); Danish: Jørgen; Estonian: Spanish and Portuguese: Jorge; Italian: Giorgio; Catalan: Jordi; Lithuanian: Jurgis; ...
Meaning:farmer. Georgy as a boy's name is of Greek origin, and the meaning of Georgy is "farmer".
Georgiy is Russian, with the nicknames Gosha and Zhora.
Göran or Jöran (both pronounced [ˈjœ̂ːran]) is the Swedish form of George, not to be confused with the Slavic Goran. Notable people with the name include: Göran Andersson, Swedish sport sailor.
Georgina is a timeless girl's name with roots in the earth's soil, literally. The feminine version of George, it springs from Latin roots and is a close cousin of the name Georgia.
Joji (じょうじ, 丈二, or 譲二, 城二, 譲治 multiple variants) is a Japanese masculine given name. It is also the Japanese pronunciation of the Western name "George" (ジョージ). It commonly refers to: Jōji, an era in Japanese history. Joji (musician), stage name of musician and former Internet personality George Miller.
Jury, Jurij, Iurii, Iouri, Yury, Yuri, Youri, Yurii, Yuriy or Yurij is the Slavic (Belarusian: Юры, romanized: Jury, or Bulgarian: Юрий, romanized: Jurij, or Ukrainian: Юрій, romanized: Yuriy, or Russian: Юрий, romanized: Yuriy) form of the masculine given name George; it is derived directly from the Greek form ...
Juraj is a given name used in a number of Slavic languages, including Czech, Slovak, and Croatian. Pronounced "You-rye" but with a trilled r. The English equivalent of the name is George.
For example, there are two Finnish cognates of George, Yrjö < Swedish Örjan and Jyri < Russian Юрий (Yuri).
In Romanian, the name George exists in two spellings and two different pronunciations: George with two soft g sounds (George, written as g in Romanian) and Gheorghe with two hard g sounds (Gheorghe, written as gh in Romanian, as in Italian and some other languages), the hard g sounds that are also found in Gheorghiu.
Jerzy is the Polish version of the masculine given name George. The most common nickname for Jerzy is Jurek (Polish: [ˈjurɛk]), which may also be used as an official first name. Occasionally the nickname Jerzyk may be used, which means "swift" in Polish.
Italian form of George, which is from the Greek name Georgios, from georgos, meaning "farmer, earthworker", which is from ge, meaning "earth" and ergon, meaning "work".
Its original Greek form, Georgios, is based on the Greek word georgos (γεωργός) 'farmer'. The word georgos itself is ultimately a combination of two Greek words: ge (γῆ) 'earth, soil' and ergon (ἔργον) 'work'.
Dod or Doddie is a Scottish nickname, usually a diminutive or tee-name for "George".
George {proper noun}
Jørgen {pr. n.}
The most common meaning for Mishka is as a nickname for Mikhail. That's the Russian version of Michael, a biblical name that means "who is like God." Mishka can also mean "little bear," since it's close to the word for bear in Russian.
Russia: Babushka is the name children in Russia call their grandmother, and, yes, the Russian nesting dolls are sometimes called babushka dolls. Spain and Latin America: Abuela and Abuelita are common terms, often shortened to Lita.