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Meaning theme

18 Names That Mean Royalty

Names that mean royal include Basil (Greek, kingly), Rex (Latin, king), Sarah (Hebrew, princess), Regina (Latin, queen), and Malik (Arabic, king). Rhiannon descends from a Celtic title meaning great queen, while Henry and Frederick both carry Germanic elements meaning ruler.

Royal names reach back to the words for king, queen, and ruler in Latin, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and beyond. Some are titles used outright, like Rex and Regina, while others hide their crowns inside everyday favorites like Sarah, Henry, and Ryan. Each name here carries a genuine root of rulership.

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  • Sarah is the Hebrew word for princess or noblewoman, the name of the biblical matriarch, and Amira is its Arabic counterpart, the feminine of emir. Orla, an Irish name meaning golden princess, combines royalty with gold.

  • Rex is the Latin word for king, Malik is the Arabic, and Basil comes from the Greek basileios, royal. Ryan likely means little king, from the Irish rí, and Eric descends from an Old Norse name read as ever-ruler.

  • Regina is the Latin word for queen, used as a Christian name honoring Mary as Queen of Heaven. Rhiannon traces to the Celtic Rigantona, great queen, and Vasilisa is the Russian feminine of the Greek word for king.

  • Henry and Harriet mean ruler of the home, from the Germanic Heimirich, while Frederick means peaceful ruler. Reginald combines counsel with rule, and all four arrived in English through royalty who actually wore the crowns.

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