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Names starting with letter K

📝 551 Names 🔤 Letter: K
Gender:

Showing 50 of 551 names • Letter: K

Tap any name to see its full etymology, deity association and language origins.
Name Hindi Name Meaning
Kulin कुलीन Of noble birth; well-born, high-bred
Khoobsurat खूबसूरत Beautiful (feminine usage)
Kalinga कलिंग The ancient kingdom of Kalinga; of valiant heritage
Kumaragupta कुमारगुप्त The Gupta emperor Kumaragupta
Kalptaru कल्पतरु The wish-fulfilling divine tree
Kuntal कुन्तल Tresses of hair; lustrous locks
Kalyannath कल्याणनाथ Lord of auspiciousness; an epithet of Shiva
Kamalkant कमलकान्त Lord of the lotus; the Sun, or Vishnu
Kamalkishore कमलकिशोर The lotus-like youth; the young Krishna
Kamesh कामेश Lord of desire; master of love
Khushdeep खुशदीप Lamp of joy; the joyful divine flame
Kuldeepika कुलदीपिका Lamp of the family; light of the lineage
Karamullah करमुल्लाह The grace and bounty of Allah
Kulpriya कुलप्रिया Beloved of the family; dear to the lineage
Kunjal कुंजल The koel (cuckoo); a sweet songbird
Kunjika कुंजिका A little bower; a key; a forest grove
Kushala कुशला Skilful, capable; well and auspicious
Kashan काशान Of Kashan; the city of silk, carpets and rosewater
Kumuda कुमुदा The white water-lily; the moonlit night-lotus
Kusha कुशा The sacred kusha grass; pure and auspicious
Kajjali कज्जली Kohl; a dark monsoon cloud; the Kajari folk raga
Kamleshwari कमलेश्वरी Goddess of the lotus; an epithet of Lakshmi
Kamalini कमलिनी A lotus pond; a cluster of lotuses
Kajali काजली Kohl; the Kajari monsoon folk-song
Kashvika काश्विका The radiant, shining little one
Kavyashri काव्याश्री The grace of poetry; poetic radiance
Kalpavriksha कल्पवृक्षा The wish-fulfilling divine tree (feminine)
Kalyanshri कल्याणश्री Auspicious grace; the glory of well-being
Kalima कालिमा Dark lustre; the deep glow of beauty
Kaisar कैसर An emperor, a sovereign king; Caesar
Kajri कजरी The Kajri monsoon folk-song; kohl-eyed
Kapoori कपूरी Fragrant and fair as camphor
Kesarisingh केसरीसिंह The lion-hearted; a valiant warrior
Kalakriti कलाकृति A work of art; an artistic creation
Keshini केशिनी A woman with beautiful, long flowing hair
Kalpalata कल्पलता The wish-fulfilling creeper; divine vine
Kaivalya कैवल्या Absolute liberation; the bliss of oneness
Kaishiki कैशिकी A delicate, graceful raga; the gentle Kaishiki style
Kailashi कैलाशी She who dwells on Kailash; an epithet of Parvati
Keyuri केयूरी One adorned with armlets; graceful and ornamented
Kaifiyat कैफ़ियत A state of rapture; a mood of ecstasy and heightened feeling
Kovid कोविद Wise, learned, deeply knowledgeable
Kaukab कौकब A star; a shining celestial body
Kautuk कौतुक Joyful wonder, eager delight; a festive auspiciousness
Koteshwar कोटेश्वर Lord of crores; an epithet of Lord Shiva
Kirtivardhan कीर्तिवर्धन One who increases glory; enhancer of fame
Kaul कौल A follower of the Kaula (vama-marg) Tantric path
Kaunain कौनैन The two worlds; this world and the hereafter
Kausheya कौशेय Silk; soft and lustrous as fine silk
Kinkini किंकिणी A small tinkling bell; an anklet-bell

About Baby Names Starting with K

Vedic Nakshatra-Pada origin of the letter K

In the Vedic naming tradition (Namakarana), the first sound of a child's Sanskrit name is drawn from the Moon's Nakshatra-Pada at the moment of birth. Each of the 27 Nakshatras is divided into 4 Padas, and every Pada is assigned a unique syllable — producing the 108 sacred aksharas of the Vedic naming system. The English letter K below maps to 9 Nakshatra-Padas, which is why names on this page can be traced back to specific stars:

If you already know your baby's Nakshatra and Pada from a horoscope, click the relevant pada above to see only the names that match that exact syllable. If you're not sure, use the birth-details tool to compute it from birth date, time, and place.

When browsing baby names by letter makes sense

Not everyone picks a baby name from the astrological chart. Many parents have already narrowed to a starting letter for other reasons — a family tradition (naming after a grandparent whose name begins with a specific letter), a cultural convention (some communities name children with letters following the parents’ initials), or simply a preference for a particular sound. This page lets you browse the full curated database by first letter — A through Z, plus the Devanagari script — so you can quickly see all the names beginning with the letter you have in mind.

How to pick a baby name — a short guide

There is no single right way to name a child, but a few considerations help most parents converge on a name they’ll be happy with for decades. Some of the most useful lenses:

  • Meaning — a name people love saying because of what it evokes tends to stick. Every name in our database includes a plain-English meaning, tracing to a Sanskrit, Punjabi, Urdu, or regional root where applicable.
  • Sound and rhythm — say the full name aloud with your last name. Names that flow well aloud rarely feel awkward on paper. Watch for accidental rhymes or unintended puns.
  • Cultural fit — if the child will grow up in a specific linguistic community, a name from that tradition often feels more grounded. Our database groups by origin so you can filter within Hindu / Sanskrit, Punjabi Gurbani, Urdu-Persian, or regional variants.
  • Nicknames and short forms — think about what the name will become when people shorten it. If you dislike the short form, the full name may still get shortened socially.
  • Initials — a check for unintended acronyms with the family surname.
  • Uniqueness vs familiarity — both extremes have trade-offs. Unusual names get more repeat-spelling requests but stand out. Common names feel effortless but may need a differentiator in shared spaces.

The Indian naming landscape covered here

The database reflects the actual naming traditions across the subcontinent, not a single canonical list. Names come from four broad source families:

  • Sanskrit / Hindu — roots from the Vedas, Puranas, Ramayana, Mahabharata, and later Bhakti tradition. Deity names, virtue names, nature names.
  • Punjabi Gurbani / Sikh — compound names built on Gurmukhi roots with prefixes like Gur-, Jas-, Khush-, Har-, Sat-. Many are traditionally unisex.
  • Urdu / Muslim — Arabic and Persian-origin names common across Muslim families in India and South Asia.
  • Regional — Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam adaptations where the underlying akshara maps cleanly.

If you want tradition-aligned naming

Alphabetical browsing is fast when you have a preferred starting letter. But if you want the name to align with your baby’s Vedic birth details — i.e., the traditional practice of picking the first sound from the Moon’s Nakshatra and Pada at birth — two other methods are more precise:

  • By birth details — enter the baby’s birth date, time, and place; the tool computes the Nakshatra and Pada and filters to only names beginning with that Pada’s syllable.
  • By Nakshatra + Pada — browse the 27-Nakshatra table if you already know your baby’s Nakshatra from a priest or existing horoscope.

Both methods draw from the same curated database as this alphabetical view — they just narrow the list differently.

What’s in each name entry

Click any name to see its full detail card, which includes: the name in English transliteration and Devanagari (for Hindi names), a plain-English meaning, origin and language, etymology tracing the root, deity or scriptural association where the name is attested in classical texts, gender, popularity indicator, related variations, and matching family surnames where relevant.

Explore the rest of Nakshatrica

One tool won't answer everything. Nakshatrica pairs each landing page with a full set of free, Swiss-Ephemeris-precise Vedic tools — pick whichever you need next.

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