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Indian name

Indian names are based on a variety of systems and naming conventions, which vary from region to region. Names are also influenced by religion and caste and may come from epics. India's population speaks a wide variety of languages and nearly every major religion in the world has a following in India. This variety makes for subtle, often confusing, differences in names and naming styles. Due to historical Indian cultural influences, several names across South and Southeast Asia are influenced by or adapted from Indian names or words.[citation needed]

In some cases, Indian birth name is different from their official name; the birth name starts with a selected name from the person's horoscope (based on the nakshatra or lunar mansion corresponding to the person's birth).

Many children are given three names, sometimes as a part of religious teaching.

Pronunciation

When written in Latin script, Indian names may use the vowel characters to denote sounds different from conventional American or British English. Although some languages, like Kannada or Tamil may have different vowel sounds, the ones used in most major Indian languages are represented in this table along with typical English transcriptions.

IPA ə/ɔ ɪ ʊ ɛː/əɪ/ɔi o ɔː/əʊ/ou
English transcription a a i ee u oo e ai o au/ou


Furthermore, the letters used in English /t/ and /d/ that are used to represent the retroflex stops /ʈ/ and /ɖ/, are also used to represent dental stops /t̪/ and /d̪/ (as in Tenginkai or Rohit), especially when they occur in the onset of a word. As an example, the Indian name 'Dev' would not have its first consonant pronounced as in the American name 'Dave'. Similarly the name 'Tarun' would not have its first consonant sounded as in 'Tom'.

The letter 'h' is used to represent aspirated consonants. So, in the names 'Khare', 'Ghanshyam', 'Kaccha', 'Jhumki', 'Vitthal', 'Ranchodh', 'Uddhav', 'Phaneesh', and 'Bhanu,' the 'h' means the sound before it should be pronounced with a strong outward breath (see Aspirated consonant for more on this). These names are more likely to be found in places that speak an Indo-Aryan language like Bhojpuri or Gujarati.

Names by culture

Assamese

Assamese names follow the First name-Middle name-Surname or First name-Surname pattern.

Bengali

Bengali names follow First name-Middle name-Surname pattern, as seen with Subhas Chandra Bose.

Bengali Brahmin surnames include Acharya, Banerjee, Bagchi, Bhaduri, Bhattacharjee, Chakraborty, Chatterjee, Ganguly, Goswami, Ghoshal, Lahiri, Maitra, Mukherjee, Sanyal, etc. A Brahmin name is often the name of the clan or gotra, but can be an honorific, such as Chakraborty or Bhattacharya.

Common Baidya surnames are Sengupta, Dasgupta, Duttagupta, Gupta, Das-Sharma, and Sen-Sharma.[citation needed]

Bengali Kayastha surnames include Basu, Bose, Dutta, Ghosh, Choudhury, Guha, Mitra, Singh/Sinha, Pal, De/Dey/Deb/Dev, Palit, Chanda/Chandra, Das, Dam, Kar, Nandi, Nag, Som etc.[1]

Odia

Odia names follow the First name-Middle name-Surname or First name-Surname pattern.

Odia surnames come from caste based on human occupation. For example, the common surnames Kar, Mohapatra, and Dash (as opposed to Das) are Brahmin surnames. Similarly, Misra/Mishra, Nanda, Rath, Shatapathi, Panigrahi, and Tripathi are all Brahmin surnames. Das and Sahu are Karan, others are Samant Singh, Sundaraya, Jagdev, Baliarsingh, Harichandan, Manraj, Mardraj, Senapati, Srichandan, Pratihari, Chhotray, Patasani, Parida, Samal, Nayak, and Muduli.

Goan

Konkani people inhabiting Goa, and also Konkan regions of Karnataka and Maharashtra, use First name - Middle name - Village name/Surname pattern. Generally, the first name is followed by the father's name, though this is now mostly observed by Hindus, who are traditionally patriarchal.[2]

Village names were used only after the arrival of the Portuguese, when the people migrated from their ancestral villages. A suffix kar or hailing from was attached to the village name.[3]

Many of the originally Hindu residents were converted to Catholicism by the Portuguese. Almost all of the Konkani Catholics have Portuguese surnames like Rodrigues, Fernandes, Pereira and D'Souza.[4][5] Catholic families belonging to the Roman Catholic Brahmin (Bamonn) caste use lusophonised versions of Hindu surnames like Prabhu, Bhat, etc.[6]

Gujarati

Gujarati names follow a pattern of Given name, Father's given name, Surname. The last name is commonly a caste name. For example: Narendra Damodardas Modi - Narendra is his first name, Damodardas is his father's name and Modi is his last name, which is the same as that used by his ancestors.

Upon marriage, the wife takes on the husband's first and last names as middle and last names respectively.

Northern

Northern naming customs follow a standard pattern of First name - Middle name - Surname. Many times the middle name will be appended onto the first name, or not exist at all. Sometimes middle name would even be father's first name. The surname is most commonly a caste name however, there are some caste-neutral surnames like Kumar. For example: Manohar Lal Khattar (Manohar is his first name, Lal is a middle name, and Khattar is a caste surname). Many women, especially in rural areas, take on the surname Devi (meaning Goddess) or Kumari (princess) when they are married (ex. Phoolan Devi, known as Phoolan Mallah before marriage). Muslims in North India use Islamic naming conventions.[7]

Kannada

Kannada names vary by region as follows.

North Karnataka follows the First name - Father's first name - Surname order. This system is also found in other parts of Karnataka.[citation needed]

Surnames are drawn from the names of places, food items, dresses, temples, type of people, platforms, cities, professions, and so on.[8] Surnames are drawn from many other sources.

Katti as a suffix is used for soldiers while Karadis is related to local folk art. Surnames according to trade or what they traditionally farm include Vastrad (piece of cloth), Kubasad (blouse), Menasinkai (chili), Ullagaddi (onion), Limbekai, Ballolli (garlic), Tenginkai (coconut), Byali (pulse), and Akki (rice). Surnames based on house include Doddamani (big house), Hadimani (house next to the road), Kattimani (house with a platform in its front), Bevinmarad (person having a big neem tree near his house), and Hunasimarad (person having a big tamarind tree near his house). A carpenter will have Badigar as a surname, while Mirjankar, Belagavi, Hublikar, and Jamkhandi are surnames drawn from places. Angadi (shop), Amavasya (new moon day), Kage (crow), Bandi (bullock cart), Kuri (sheep), Kudari (horse), Toppige (cap), Beegadkai (key), Pyati (market), Hanagi (comb), and Rotti (bread) are some other surnames.

In coastal Karnataka, the surnames are different in different regions. Surnames like Hegde and Hebbar belong to the Brahmin community, while other titles like Ballal, Shetty, and Rai are mostly used by the landed Bunt community. Names in coastal Karnataka have both systems Village name - Father's name - Personal name - Surname and Personal name - Father's name - Surname.[citation needed]

Names in South Karnataka follow Village name - Father's name - Personal name - Surname. Examples:

For married women, it is Husband's name - First name or the opposite (ex. Sumalatha Ambareesh, where Ambareesh is her husband's name).[7]

In South Karnataka, caste names are not common except among the higher castes. Kannada Brahmins have surnames like Rao, Murthy, Poojari, and Bhat. The title Gowda was a title given to any village headman, irrespective of caste, and was written as an appendage to the person's name. For example Siddaramaiah's father belonged to the Kuruba community but was called Siddarame Gowda. Nowadays it is mostly used as a Vokkaliga surname. Most people in South Karnataka, regardless of caste, do not use caste surnames.[citation needed]

Kashmiri

Kashmiri names often follow the naming convention First name - Middle name (optional) - Family name. (For example: Jawahar Lal Nehru)

Nicknames often replace family names. Hence, some family names like Razdan and Nehru may very well be derived originally from the Kaul family tree.[9]

Malayali

Malayali surname includes Nair, Menon, Pillai, Nambootri, Panikkar, and Kurup. Malayalis follow similar naming customs to Tamils and people in South Karnataka, using Village name - Father's name - Personal name. Muslims also follow this system, though their first names follow the Islamic system.

Members of the Menon, Nair, and related communities often use their mother's house name or directly add their caste name.[10] For example, Kannoth Karunakaran, Karunakaran is his given name and Kannoth is his mother's house name. P. K. Vasudevan Nair, Vasudevan is his given name and Nair is his caste surname.[11] Most of the Malayalis write name as Given name - Father's name - Father's father's name/house name/village name - Suriname/caste title. For instance, Shreelakshmi Dhanapalan Sadhu Kunjpilla; where Shreelakshmi is first name, Dhanapalan is middle name/father's name, Sadhu is grandfather's name, and Kujnpilla is surname/caste title. It might also be written as Shreelakshmi Dhanapalan S K.

Earlier times (until the 20th Century) Malayali Christians (Nasranis) were bound by only Christian names and usually used the Family/house name – Father’s name – Baptismal name naming convention. Nowadays, however, Christians have various naming conventions such as Name - Surname - Father's Name or Name - Father's name or Name - Surname or Name - Father's Name - Grandfather's Name. It can be concluded that Syrian Christian names are Patryonmic. Eg: Arackaparambil Kurien Antony, better known as A. K. Antony, who is an Indian politician and attorney and was the 23rd Defence Minister of India, here the policitcan's name is Antony while his father's name is Kurien, while his family name is Arackaparambil. During the 20th century some names were created by joining two or more syllables. For example, Abey (AB), Aji (AG), Bibi (BB), Biji (BG), Siby (CB) and so on. Today, several Syrian Christians name their children by Indian names like Deepak, Rahul, Neethu, Asha etc. But by the 21st century more biblical names began to reappear. Thus names like, Isaac, Joshua, David, Saul, Ezekiel, Timothy, appeared on the scene.

Marathi

Marathi people of Hindu religion follow a partially patronymic naming system. For example, it is customary to associate the father's name with the given name. In the case of married women, the husband's name is associated with the given name. Therefore, the constituents of a Marathi name as given name/first name, father/husband name, family name/surname. For example:

  • Mahadev Govind Ranade: Here Mahadev is the given name, Govind is his father's given name and Ranade is the surname.
  • Sunil Madhav Jadhav: Here Sunil is the given name, Madhav is his father's name and Jadhav is the surname.
  • Jyotsna Mukund Khandekar: Here Jyotsna is the given name, Mukund is the husband's given name, and Khandekar is the surname of the husband[12]

Personal names

Marathi Hindus choose given names for their children from a variety of sources. They could be characters from Hindu mythological epics such as the Ramayana or Mahabharat, names of holy rivers such as Yamuna and Godavari, Hindu historical characters from Maratha or Indian history such as Shivaji and Ashoka, Marathi varkari saints such as Tukaram, Dnyaneshwar, Janabai, popular characters from modern Marathi literature, names of fragrant flowers for girls (e.g. Bakul, Kamal/Kamla for lotus), senses such as Madhura for sweetness, precious metals such female name Suwarna for gold, heavenly bodies such as the Sun and the Moon, Vasant and Sharad for spring and autumn respectively, names of film stars (e.g. Amit after Amitabh Bachchan) or sportsmen, and after virtues (e.g.,Vinay for modesty). Nicknames such as Dada, Bandu, Balu, Sonya and Pillu for males and Chhabu and Bebi for girls have been popular too.[13]

Surnames

A large number of Maharashtrian surnames are derived by adding the suffix kar to the village from which the family originally hailed.[14] For example, Junnarkar came from town of Junnar, Waghulkar comes from the town of Waghul. Names like Kumbhar, Sutar, Kulkarni, Deshpande, Deshmukh, Patil, Pawar, Desai, and Joshi denote the family's ancestral trade or professions.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

Families of the historical Maratha chiefs use their clan name as their surname. Some of these are Jadhav, Bhosale, Chavan, Shinde, Shirke, More, Nimbalkar, Pawar, and Ghatge.[22] Members of the numerically largest Maratha Kunbi cultivator class among Marathi people have also adopted some of the Maratha clan names, whether to indicate allegiance to the Maratha chief they served, or as an attempt at upward mobility.[23]

Punjabi

Sikh names often have the following format: First name - Religious name - Family name. The religious name is always Singh for males, for example "Ravinder Singh Sahota"; and Kaur for females, examples include "Harmanpreet Kaur Bhullar", "Harleen Kaur Deol", and "Manjeet Kaur Bhullar". Since Sikhism opposes castes, they do not traditionally use family names. Upon marriage, a Sikh woman will take the family name of the husband.

Sardar for males and Sardarni for females are sometimes prefixed as titles. A lot of Sikh first names can be used by both sexes.[7]

Tamil

Tamil names usually follow this pattern: Initial (Village name) - Initial (Father's name) - First name - Surname (Example: M.G. Ramachandran, where the M stands for Marudhur, and G stands for Gopalan, the father's name. Another example is R. Karthik, where R stands for Ravichandran, the father's name). There is a widespread usage of a patronym (use of the father's given name as the last name). This means that the first name of one generation becomes the last name of the next. In many cases, the father's given name appears as an initial and when written in full (for example, on a passport),[24] the initial is expanded as last name. For example, a name like "R. Kumaresh" will be written in full as "or "Kumaresh Ramaiah", and refers to "Kumaresh son of Ramaiah". If Kumaresh then has a son named Vijay, then his name would be "K. Vijay" or "Vijay Kumaresh " as it would be in the West. There is also a general custom for Tamil women, after marriage to adopt their husband's first name as their new initial or new last name instead of their father's. A woman named K. Anitha / Anitha Kumaresh (Anitha daughter of Kumaresh) might change her name after marriage to S. Anitha / Anitha Saravanan (Anitha wife of Saravanan). However, these customs vary from family to family and are normally never carried on over successive generations.

Due to the influence of the Dravidian movement, from the 1930s, most Tamils abandoned their surnames, both in India and nations like Singapore, due to the arising consciousness that these surnames were synonymous with their caste identity, leading to social stigma.[25][26]

More common among women, making the patronym or husband name the last name is a custom adopted by people migrating to the West, who want to be called by their first names without having to explain Indian naming conventions. However, women frequently adopt their father's or husband's name, and take it for successive generations.

The various Tamil caste names include Paraiyar, Vishwakarma, Aachari, Konar, Idaiyar, Reddiar, Udayar, Yadhavar, Iyengar, Iyer, Pillai, Mudaliar, Thevar, Nadar, Chettiar, Gounder, Naicker, Vanniyar etc. The naming is therefore done in the fashion: Sunitha Ram Kumar Pillai. And hence they are known to only use initials besides their name except for when caste names are given more preference by certain families rather than the family name itself.[27][28]

Telugu

Telugu people have a different naming style from the rest of India. The family name is a genitive case, hence stands first, which is followed by personal name.[29] This practice of placing family name first is also seen in Chinese and Hungarians.[29]

Thus "Family name (surname), Given name" format is contrasted from North India where family name typically appears last or other parts of South India where family names are little used. This might cause confusion to varying degree within India and rest of the world.[30]

Occasionally, caste name is also suffixed at the end. For example, Neelam Sanjiva Reddy, where Neelam is the family name, Sanjiva is the given name, and Reddy is the caste name.

Occasionally, some Telugu names may follow a slightly different convention where two personal names are given along with a family name. In the name, Amara Vishnu Dev, Amara is the family name and Vishnu Dev are the given names.

Muslims however have family names expressed at the end of their names.[31]

Personal names

Telugu people are often named after Hindu gods or goddesses.[29]

Family names

Nearly all Telugus possess family names called "Inti peru" (lit.'House name'), which are the most unique of all the linguistic groups in India.[32]

Telugu family names are often named after a place. For example, Pasupaleti after Pasupaleru, Kondaveeti after Kondaveedu, Kandukuri after Kandukur, etc. Unlike western names in which the family name is more well known than the personal name, among the Telugu given names are how people are most widely known.[29]

Telugu family names are often abbreviated and written, e.g., P. V. Narasimha Rao, D. Ramanaidu, etc., unlike western names where given name is abbreviated.[29]

Indexing

According to The Chicago Manual of Style, Indian names are usually indexed by the family name, with the family name separated from the other names by a comma, but indexing may differ according to the local usage and the preferences of the individual.[33]

Global Indian influence in names

See Indosphere, Sanskritisation, Indianization of Southeast Asia as well as Influence of Indian honorifics in Southeast Asia, influenced the Malay/Indonesian, Thai, and Filipino honorifics.

See also

References

  1. ^ S. K. Sharma, U. Sharma, ed. (2005). Discovery of North-East India: Geography, History, Culture, Religion, Politics, Sociology, Science, Education and Economy. North-East India. Volume 1. Mittal Publications. p. 182. ISBN 978-81-83-24035-2.
  2. ^ da Silva Gracias, Fátima (1996). Kaleidoscope of women in Goa, 1510–1961. Concept Publishing Company. pp. 166 pages (see page:148). ISBN 9788170225911.
  3. ^ Nāyaka, Puṇḍalīka Nārāyaṇa; Vidya Pai (2002), Upheaval (in English and Konkani), p. 144
  4. ^ Kurzon, Dennis (2004). Where East looks West: success in English in Goa and on the Konkan Coas. Multilingual Matters. pp. 158 pages9see page:27). ISBN 9781853596735.
  5. ^ Pinto 1999, p. 168
  6. ^ Maffei 1882, p. 217
  7. ^ a b c "UK Naming Guide" (PDF). UK Government. 2006.
  8. ^ Vincent D'Souza (11 March 2011). "Names have interesting surnames in north Karnataka". The Times of India. The Times of India. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
  9. ^ ' Toward Freedom: An Autobiography of JawaharLal Nehru', the first prime minister of India. Chapter III - Descent from Kashmir, p. 16. ISBN 978-1-299-41105-0
    Nehru Says:
    We were Kashmiris. Over two hundred years ago, early in the eighteenth century, our ancestor came down from that mountain valley to seek fame and fortune in the rich plains below. Those were the days of the decline of the Moghal Empire.
    Raj Kaul was the name of that ancestor of ours, and he had gained eminence as a Sanskrit and Persian scholar. He attracted the notice of the Emperor and, probably at his instance, the family migrated to Delhi, the imperial capital, about the year 1716. A jagir with a house situated on the banks of a canal had been granted to Raj Kaul, and, from the fact of this residence, "Nehru" (from nahar, a canal) came to be attached to his name. Kaul had been the family name; in later years, this dropped out and we became simply Nehrus.
  10. ^ syngrafi (3 November 2019). "Should I call myself a Nair?". Medium. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  11. ^ "Members - Kerala Legislature". www.niyamasabha.org. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  12. ^ Sharma, D.D. (2005). Panorama of Indian anthroponomy : (an historical, socio-cultural & linguistic analysis of Indian personal names. New Delhi, India: Mittal Publications. p. 192. ISBN 9788183240789.
  13. ^ Dhongde, R. V. (1986). "Personal Names in Marathi". Bulletin of the Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute. 45: 25–36. JSTOR 42930151.
  14. ^ Chopra 1982, p. 52.
  15. ^ Kulkarni, A.R (1969). Maharashtra in the Age of Shivaji. R.J. Deshmukh Deshmukh. p. 32. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  16. ^ Chatterjee, Ramananda (1914). The Modern Review, Volume 16. Modern Review Office. p. 604. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  17. ^ Gaborieau, Marc; Thorner, Alice (1979). Colloques internationaux du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Issue 582. Ed. du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1979. pp. 201, 202. Patilki vatan is both coveted and fought over: Brahmins, Marathas and Mahars may all be past and present sharers in
  18. ^ "Proceedings of the Session, Volume 38". Superintendent Government Printing, India, 1967. 1967. Most of the Brahmin families hereditarily enjoyed the patilki (village headmanship) or kulkarnigiri (village accountancy) of villages
  19. ^ "The Illustrated Weekly of India". 91 (3). Bennett, Coleman & Company. July 1970: 12. Generally speaking, excepting names such as Kulkarni, Thackerey, Chitnis, Deshmukh, Deshpande, which are common to many communities in Maharashtra, a C.K.P. can be recognised by his surname. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ Irina Glushkova; Rajendra Vora (eds.). Home, Family and Kinship in Maharashtra. Oxford University Press. p. 118. The wada tells us of a story of three generations of a family called Deshpande who belong to the Deshastha Brahmin caste. ....Spread all over Maharashtra as a result of this process, Deshastha Brahmans held, in particular, the office of kulkarni.
  21. ^ Hassan, Syed Siraj ul (1989). The Castes and Tribes of H.E.H. the Nizam's Dominions, Volume 1. Times Press. ISBN 9788120604889. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  22. ^ Louis Dumont (1980). Homo hierarchicus: the caste system and its implications. University of Chicago Press. pp. 121–. ISBN 978-0-226-16963-7. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  23. ^ Rosalind O'Hanlon (22 August 2002). Caste, Conflict and Ideology: Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in Nineteenth-Century Western India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 17–. ISBN 978-0-521-52308-0. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  24. ^ Hariharan, S. a. (4 April 2010). "First name, middle name, surname... real name?". The Hindu.
  25. ^ Krishnaswamy, M. V. (2002). In Quest of Dravidian Roots in South Africa. International School of Dravidian Linguistics. p. 274. ISBN 978-81-85692-32-6.
  26. ^ Solomon, John (31 March 2016). A Subaltern History of the Indian Diaspora in Singapore: The Gradual Disappearance of Untouchability 1872-1965. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-35380-5.
  27. ^ Sakkottai Krishnaswami Aiyangar (1923). Some Contributions of South India to Indian Culture. ISBN 8120609999.
  28. ^ P.S. Sundaram (1987). The Kural.
  29. ^ a b c d e Brown, Charles Philip (1857). A Grammar of the Telugu Language. printed at the Christian Knowledge Society's Press. p. 209.
  30. ^ Agency, United States Central Intelligence (1964). Telugu Personal Names. Central Intelligence Agency. p. 5.
  31. ^ Vēlcēru Nārāyaṇarāvu (2003). Hibiscus on the Lake Twentieth-century Telugu Poetry from India. University of Wisconsin Press. p. xix. ISBN 9780299177041.
  32. ^ SA Journal of Linguistics. South Africa: Linguistic Society of Southern Africa. 1999. p. 150.
  33. ^ "Indexes: A Chapter from The Chicago Manual of Style" ( 26 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine). Chicago Manual of Style. Retrieved on 23 December 2014. p. 26 (PDF document p. 28/56).

Further reading

  • Kaushik, Devendra Kumar (2000) Cataloguing of Indic Names in AACR-2 15 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Delhi: Originals. ISBN 81-7536-187-5
  • "How well do you know about the origins of some Indian Occupational Surnames?". TheBizdom. 22 February 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2022.

indian, name, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, i. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Indian names are based on a variety of systems and naming conventions which vary from region to region Names are also influenced by religion and caste and may come from epics India s population speaks a wide variety of languages and nearly every major religion in the world has a following in India This variety makes for subtle often confusing differences in names and naming styles Due to historical Indian cultural influences several names across South and Southeast Asia are influenced by or adapted from Indian names or words citation needed In some cases Indian birth name is different from their official name the birth name starts with a selected name from the person s horoscope based on the nakshatra or lunar mansion corresponding to the person s birth Many children are given three names sometimes as a part of religious teaching Contents 1 Pronunciation 2 Names by culture 2 1 Assamese 2 2 Bengali 2 3 Odia 2 4 Goan 2 5 Gujarati 2 6 Northern 2 7 Kannada 2 8 Kashmiri 2 9 Malayali 2 10 Marathi 2 10 1 Personal names 2 10 2 Surnames 2 11 Punjabi 2 12 Tamil 2 13 Telugu 2 13 1 Personal names 2 13 2 Family names 3 Indexing 4 Global Indian influence in names 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingPronunciation EditThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Confusing and non standard pronunciation guide Please help improve this section if you can June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message When written in Latin script Indian names may use the vowel characters to denote sounds different from conventional American or British English Although some languages like Kannada or Tamil may have different vowel sounds the ones used in most major Indian languages are represented in this table along with typical English transcriptions IPA e ɔ aː ɪ iː ʊ uː eː ɛː eɪ ɔi o ɔː eʊ ouEnglish transcription a a i ee u oo e ai o au ouFurthermore the letters used in English t and d that are used to represent the retroflex stops ʈ and ɖ are also used to represent dental stops t and d as in Tenginkai or Rohit especially when they occur in the onset of a word As an example the Indian name Dev would not have its first consonant pronounced as in the American name Dave Similarly the name Tarun would not have its first consonant sounded as in Tom The letter h is used to represent aspirated consonants So in the names Khare Ghanshyam Kaccha Jhumki Vitthal Ranchodh Uddhav Phaneesh and Bhanu the h means the sound before it should be pronounced with a strong outward breath see Aspirated consonant for more on this These names are more likely to be found in places that speak an Indo Aryan language like Bhojpuri or Gujarati Names by culture EditAssamese Edit Assamese names follow the First name Middle name Surname or First name Surname pattern Bengali Edit Bengali names follow First name Middle name Surname pattern as seen with Subhas Chandra Bose Bengali Brahmin surnames include Acharya Banerjee Bagchi Bhaduri Bhattacharjee Chakraborty Chatterjee Ganguly Goswami Ghoshal Lahiri Maitra Mukherjee Sanyal etc A Brahmin name is often the name of the clan or gotra but can be an honorific such as Chakraborty or Bhattacharya Common Baidya surnames are Sengupta Dasgupta Duttagupta Gupta Das Sharma and Sen Sharma citation needed Bengali Kayastha surnames include Basu Bose Dutta Ghosh Choudhury Guha Mitra Singh Sinha Pal De Dey Deb Dev Palit Chanda Chandra Das Dam Kar Nandi Nag Som etc 1 Odia Edit Odia names follow the First name Middle name Surname or First name Surname pattern Odia surnames come from caste based on human occupation For example the common surnames Kar Mohapatra and Dash as opposed to Das are Brahmin surnames Similarly Misra Mishra Nanda Rath Shatapathi Panigrahi and Tripathi are all Brahmin surnames Das and Sahu are Karan others are Samant Singh Sundaraya Jagdev Baliarsingh Harichandan Manraj Mardraj Senapati Srichandan Pratihari Chhotray Patasani Parida Samal Nayak and Muduli Goan Edit Konkani people inhabiting Goa and also Konkan regions of Karnataka and Maharashtra use First name Middle name Village name Surname pattern Generally the first name is followed by the father s name though this is now mostly observed by Hindus who are traditionally patriarchal 2 Village names were used only after the arrival of the Portuguese when the people migrated from their ancestral villages A suffix kar or hailing from was attached to the village name 3 Many of the originally Hindu residents were converted to Catholicism by the Portuguese Almost all of the Konkani Catholics have Portuguese surnames like Rodrigues Fernandes Pereira and D Souza 4 5 Catholic families belonging to the Roman Catholic Brahmin Bamonn caste use lusophonised versions of Hindu surnames like Prabhu Bhat etc 6 Gujarati Edit Gujarati names follow a pattern of Given name Father s given name Surname The last name is commonly a caste name For example Narendra Damodardas Modi Narendra is his first name Damodardas is his father s name and Modi is his last name which is the same as that used by his ancestors Upon marriage the wife takes on the husband s first and last names as middle and last names respectively Northern Edit Northern naming customs follow a standard pattern of First name Middle name Surname Many times the middle name will be appended onto the first name or not exist at all Sometimes middle name would even be father s first name The surname is most commonly a caste name however there are some caste neutral surnames like Kumar For example Manohar Lal Khattar Manohar is his first name Lal is a middle name and Khattar is a caste surname Many women especially in rural areas take on the surname Devi meaning Goddess or Kumari princess when they are married ex Phoolan Devi known as Phoolan Mallah before marriage Muslims in North India use Islamic naming conventions 7 Kannada Edit Kannada names vary by region as follows North Karnataka follows the First name Father s first name Surname order This system is also found in other parts of Karnataka citation needed Surnames are drawn from the names of places food items dresses temples type of people platforms cities professions and so on 8 Surnames are drawn from many other sources Katti as a suffix is used for soldiers while Karadis is related to local folk art Surnames according to trade or what they traditionally farm include Vastrad piece of cloth Kubasad blouse Menasinkai chili Ullagaddi onion Limbekai Ballolli garlic Tenginkai coconut Byali pulse and Akki rice Surnames based on house include Doddamani big house Hadimani house next to the road Kattimani house with a platform in its front Bevinmarad person having a big neem tree near his house and Hunasimarad person having a big tamarind tree near his house A carpenter will have Badigar as a surname while Mirjankar Belagavi Hublikar and Jamkhandi are surnames drawn from places Angadi shop Amavasya new moon day Kage crow Bandi bullock cart Kuri sheep Kudari horse Toppige cap Beegadkai key Pyati market Hanagi comb and Rotti bread are some other surnames In coastal Karnataka the surnames are different in different regions Surnames like Hegde and Hebbar belong to the Brahmin community while other titles like Ballal Shetty and Rai are mostly used by the landed Bunt community Names in coastal Karnataka have both systems Village name Father s name Personal name Surname and Personal name Father s name Surname citation needed Names in South Karnataka follow Village name Father s name Personal name Surname Examples H aradanahalli D evegowda Kumaraswamy Haradanahalli is his native village Devegowda is his father s name and Kumaraswamy is his given name T umkur M ahesh Pranav Tumkur is his native town Mahesh is his father s name and Pranav is his given name For married women it is Husband s name First name or the opposite ex Sumalatha Ambareesh where Ambareesh is her husband s name 7 In South Karnataka caste names are not common except among the higher castes Kannada Brahmins have surnames like Rao Murthy Poojari and Bhat The title Gowda was a title given to any village headman irrespective of caste and was written as an appendage to the person s name For example Siddaramaiah s father belonged to the Kuruba community but was called Siddarame Gowda Nowadays it is mostly used as a Vokkaliga surname Most people in South Karnataka regardless of caste do not use caste surnames citation needed Kashmiri Edit Kashmiri names often follow the naming convention First name Middle name optional Family name For example Jawahar Lal Nehru Nicknames often replace family names Hence some family names like Razdan and Nehru may very well be derived originally from the Kaul family tree 9 Malayali Edit Malayali surname includes Nair Menon Pillai Nambootri Panikkar and Kurup Malayalis follow similar naming customs to Tamils and people in South Karnataka using Village name Father s name Personal name Muslims also follow this system though their first names follow the Islamic system Members of the Menon Nair and related communities often use their mother s house name or directly add their caste name 10 For example Kannoth Karunakaran Karunakaran is his given name and Kannoth is his mother s house name P K Vasudevan Nair Vasudevan is his given name and Nair is his caste surname 11 Most of the Malayalis write name as Given name Father s name Father s father s name house name village name Suriname caste title For instance Shreelakshmi Dhanapalan Sadhu Kunjpilla where Shreelakshmi is first name Dhanapalan is middle name father s name Sadhu is grandfather s name and Kujnpilla is surname caste title It might also be written as Shreelakshmi Dhanapalan S K Earlier times until the 20th Century Malayali Christians Nasranis were bound by only Christian names and usually used the Family house name Father s name Baptismal name naming convention Nowadays however Christians have various naming conventions such as Name Surname Father s Name or Name Father s nameorName SurnameorName Father s Name Grandfather s Name It can be concluded that Syrian Christian names are Patryonmic Eg Arackaparambil Kurien Antony better known as A K Antony who is an Indian politician and attorney and was the 23rd Defence Minister of India here the policitcan s name is Antony while his father s name is Kurien while his family name is Arackaparambil During the 20th century some names were created by joining two or more syllables For example Abey AB Aji AG Bibi BB Biji BG Siby CB and so on Today several Syrian Christians name their children by Indian names like Deepak Rahul Neethu Asha etc But by the 21st century more biblical names began to reappear Thus names like Isaac Joshua David Saul Ezekiel Timothy appeared on the scene Marathi Edit Marathi people of Hindu religion follow a partially patronymic naming system For example it is customary to associate the father s name with the given name In the case of married women the husband s name is associated with the given name Therefore the constituents of a Marathi name as given name first name father husband name family name surname For example Mahadev Govind Ranade Here Mahadev is the given name Govind is his father s given name and Ranade is the surname Sunil Madhav Jadhav Here Sunil is the given name Madhav is his father s name and Jadhav is the surname Jyotsna Mukund Khandekar Here Jyotsna is the given name Mukund is the husband s given name and Khandekar is the surname of the husband 12 Personal names Edit Marathi Hindus choose given names for their children from a variety of sources They could be characters from Hindu mythological epics such as the Ramayana or Mahabharat names of holy rivers such as Yamuna and Godavari Hindu historical characters from Maratha or Indian history such as Shivaji and Ashoka Marathi varkari saints such as Tukaram Dnyaneshwar Janabai popular characters from modern Marathi literature names of fragrant flowers for girls e g Bakul Kamal Kamla for lotus senses such as Madhura for sweetness precious metals such female name Suwarna for gold heavenly bodies such as the Sun and the Moon Vasant and Sharad for spring and autumn respectively names of film stars e g Amit after Amitabh Bachchan or sportsmen and after virtues e g Vinay for modesty Nicknames such as Dada Bandu Balu Sonya and Pillu for males and Chhabu and Bebi for girls have been popular too 13 Surnames Edit A large number of Maharashtrian surnames are derived by adding the suffix kar to the village from which the family originally hailed 14 For example Junnarkar came from town of Junnar Waghulkar comes from the town of Waghul Names like Kumbhar Sutar Kulkarni Deshpande Deshmukh Patil Pawar Desai and Joshi denote the family s ancestral trade or professions 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Families of the historical Maratha chiefs use their clan name as their surname Some of these are Jadhav Bhosale Chavan Shinde Shirke More Nimbalkar Pawar and Ghatge 22 Members of the numerically largest Maratha Kunbi cultivator class among Marathi people have also adopted some of the Maratha clan names whether to indicate allegiance to the Maratha chief they served or as an attempt at upward mobility 23 Punjabi Edit Main articles Sikh names and Sikh titles Sikh names often have the following format First name Religious name Family name The religious name is always Singh for males for example Ravinder Singh Sahota and Kaur for females examples include Harmanpreet Kaur Bhullar Harleen Kaur Deol and Manjeet Kaur Bhullar Since Sikhism opposes castes they do not traditionally use family names Upon marriage a Sikh woman will take the family name of the husband Sardar for males and Sardarni for females are sometimes prefixed as titles A lot of Sikh first names can be used by both sexes 7 Tamil Edit Tamil names usually follow this pattern Initial Village name Initial Father s name First name Surname Example M G Ramachandran where the M stands for Marudhur and G stands for Gopalan the father s name Another example is R Karthik where R stands for Ravichandran the father s name There is a widespread usage of a patronym use of the father s given name as the last name This means that the first name of one generation becomes the last name of the next In many cases the father s given name appears as an initial and when written in full for example on a passport 24 the initial is expanded as last name For example a name like R Kumaresh will be written in full as or Kumaresh Ramaiah and refers to Kumaresh son of Ramaiah If Kumaresh then has a son named Vijay then his name would be K Vijay or Vijay Kumaresh as it would be in the West There is also a general custom for Tamil women after marriage to adopt their husband s first name as their new initial or new last name instead of their father s A woman named K Anitha Anitha Kumaresh Anitha daughter of Kumaresh might change her name after marriage to S Anitha Anitha Saravanan Anitha wife of Saravanan However these customs vary from family to family and are normally never carried on over successive generations Due to the influence of the Dravidian movement from the 1930s most Tamils abandoned their surnames both in India and nations like Singapore due to the arising consciousness that these surnames were synonymous with their caste identity leading to social stigma 25 26 More common among women making the patronym or husband name the last name is a custom adopted by people migrating to the West who want to be called by their first names without having to explain Indian naming conventions However women frequently adopt their father s or husband s name and take it for successive generations The various Tamil caste names include Paraiyar Vishwakarma Aachari Konar Idaiyar Reddiar Udayar Yadhavar Iyengar Iyer Pillai Mudaliar Thevar Nadar Chettiar Gounder Naicker Vanniyar etc The naming is therefore done in the fashion Sunitha Ram Kumar Pillai And hence they are known to only use initials besides their name except for when caste names are given more preference by certain families rather than the family name itself 27 28 Telugu Edit See also Telugu names Telugu people have a different naming style from the rest of India The family name is a genitive case hence stands first which is followed by personal name 29 This practice of placing family name first is also seen in Chinese and Hungarians 29 Thus Family name surname Given name format is contrasted from North India where family name typically appears last or other parts of South India where family names are little used This might cause confusion to varying degree within India and rest of the world 30 Occasionally caste name is also suffixed at the end For example Neelam Sanjiva Reddy where Neelam is the family name Sanjiva is the given name and Reddy is the caste name Occasionally some Telugu names may follow a slightly different convention where two personal names are given along with a family name In the name Amara Vishnu Dev Amara is the family name and Vishnu Dev are the given names Muslims however have family names expressed at the end of their names 31 Personal names Edit Telugu people are often named after Hindu gods or goddesses 29 Family names Edit Nearly all Telugus possess family names called Inti peru lit House name which are the most unique of all the linguistic groups in India 32 Telugu family names are often named after a place For example Pasupaleti after Pasupaleru Kondaveeti after Kondaveedu Kandukuri after Kandukur etc Unlike western names in which the family name is more well known than the personal name among the Telugu given names are how people are most widely known 29 Telugu family names are often abbreviated and written e g P V Narasimha Rao D Ramanaidu etc unlike western names where given name is abbreviated 29 Indexing EditAccording to The Chicago Manual of Style Indian names are usually indexed by the family name with the family name separated from the other names by a comma but indexing may differ according to the local usage and the preferences of the individual 33 Global Indian influence in names EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2019 See Indosphere Sanskritisation Indianization of Southeast Asia as well as Influence of Indian honorifics in Southeast Asia influenced the Malay Indonesian Thai and Filipino honorifics See also EditIndian honorifics Place names in India Surnames by countryReferences Edit S K Sharma U Sharma ed 2005 Discovery of North East India Geography History Culture Religion Politics Sociology Science Education and Economy North East India Volume 1 Mittal Publications p 182 ISBN 978 81 83 24035 2 da Silva Gracias Fatima 1996 Kaleidoscope of women in Goa 1510 1961 Concept Publishing Company pp 166 pages see page 148 ISBN 9788170225911 Nayaka Puṇḍalika Narayaṇa Vidya Pai 2002 Upheaval in English and Konkani p 144 Kurzon Dennis 2004 Where East looks West success in English in Goa and on the Konkan Coas Multilingual Matters pp 158 pages9see page 27 ISBN 9781853596735 Pinto 1999 p 168harvnb error no target CITEREFPinto1999 help Maffei 1882 p 217harvnb error no target CITEREFMaffei1882 help a b c UK Naming Guide PDF UK Government 2006 Vincent D Souza 11 March 2011 Names have interesting surnames in north Karnataka The Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 23 June 2016 Toward Freedom An Autobiography of JawaharLal Nehru the first prime minister of India Chapter III Descent from Kashmir p 16 ISBN 978 1 299 41105 0 Nehru Says We were Kashmiris Over two hundred years ago early in the eighteenth century our ancestor came down from that mountain valley to seek fame and fortune in the rich plains below Those were the days of the decline of the Moghal Empire Raj Kaul was the name of that ancestor of ours and he had gained eminence as a Sanskrit and Persian scholar He attracted the notice of the Emperor and probably at his instance the family migrated to Delhi the imperial capital about the year 1716 A jagir with a house situated on the banks of a canal had been granted to Raj Kaul and from the fact of this residence Nehru from nahar a canal came to be attached to his name Kaul had been the family name in later years this dropped out and we became simply Nehrus syngrafi 3 November 2019 Should I call myself a Nair Medium Retrieved 28 December 2020 Members Kerala Legislature www niyamasabha org Retrieved 28 December 2020 Sharma D D 2005 Panorama of Indian anthroponomy an historical socio cultural amp linguistic analysis of Indian personal names New Delhi India Mittal Publications p 192 ISBN 9788183240789 Dhongde R V 1986 Personal Names in Marathi Bulletin of the Deccan College Post Graduate and Research Institute 45 25 36 JSTOR 42930151 Chopra 1982 p 52 sfn error no target CITEREFChopra1982 help Kulkarni A R 1969 Maharashtra in the Age of Shivaji R J Deshmukh Deshmukh p 32 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Chatterjee Ramananda 1914 The Modern Review Volume 16 Modern Review Office p 604 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Gaborieau Marc Thorner Alice 1979 Colloques internationaux du Centre national de la recherche scientifique Issue 582 Ed du Centre national de la recherche scientifique 1979 pp 201 202 Patilki vatan is both coveted and fought over Brahmins Marathas and Mahars may all be past and present sharers in Proceedings of the Session Volume 38 Superintendent Government Printing India 1967 1967 Most of the Brahmin families hereditarily enjoyed the patilki village headmanship or kulkarnigiri village accountancy of villages The Illustrated Weekly of India 91 3 Bennett Coleman amp Company July 1970 12 Generally speaking excepting names such as Kulkarni Thackerey Chitnis Deshmukh Deshpande which are common to many communities in Maharashtra a C K P can be recognised by his surname a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Irina Glushkova Rajendra Vora eds Home Family and Kinship in Maharashtra Oxford University Press p 118 The wada tells us of a story of three generations of a family called Deshpande who belong to the Deshastha Brahmin caste Spread all over Maharashtra as a result of this process Deshastha Brahmans held in particular the office of kulkarni Hassan Syed Siraj ul 1989 The Castes and Tribes of H E H the Nizam s Dominions Volume 1 Times Press ISBN 9788120604889 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Louis Dumont 1980 Homo hierarchicus the caste system and its implications University of Chicago Press pp 121 ISBN 978 0 226 16963 7 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Rosalind O Hanlon 22 August 2002 Caste Conflict and Ideology Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in Nineteenth Century Western India Cambridge University Press pp 17 ISBN 978 0 521 52308 0 Retrieved 13 May 2011 Hariharan S a 4 April 2010 First name middle name surname real name The Hindu Krishnaswamy M V 2002 In Quest of Dravidian Roots in South Africa International School of Dravidian Linguistics p 274 ISBN 978 81 85692 32 6 Solomon John 31 March 2016 A Subaltern History of the Indian Diaspora in Singapore The Gradual Disappearance of Untouchability 1872 1965 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 35380 5 Sakkottai Krishnaswami Aiyangar 1923 Some Contributions of South India to Indian Culture ISBN 8120609999 P S Sundaram 1987 The Kural a b c d e Brown Charles Philip 1857 A Grammar of the Telugu Language printed at the Christian Knowledge Society s Press p 209 Agency United States Central Intelligence 1964 Telugu Personal Names Central Intelligence Agency p 5 Velceru Narayaṇaravu 2003 Hibiscus on the Lake Twentieth century Telugu Poetry from India University of Wisconsin Press p xix ISBN 9780299177041 SA Journal of Linguistics South Africa Linguistic Society of Southern Africa 1999 p 150 Indexes A Chapter from The Chicago Manual of Style Archived 26 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Manual of Style Retrieved on 23 December 2014 p 26 PDF document p 28 56 Further reading EditKaushik Devendra Kumar 2000 Cataloguing of Indic Names in AACR 2 Archived 15 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine Delhi Originals ISBN 81 7536 187 5 How well do you know about the origins of some Indian Occupational Surnames TheBizdom 22 February 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian name amp oldid 1149060449, 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