Slavomir
Slavic masculine given name
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Slavomir (Cyrillic: Славомир) is a Slavic masculine given name. It is written Slavomir in Croatian and Serbian and Slavomír in Czech and Slovak. The Polish form of the name is Sławomir.
PronunciationSerbo-Croatian: [slâʋomiːr]
Czech: [ˈslavomiːr]
Slovak: [ˈslavɔmiːr]
Czech: [ˈslavomiːr]
Slovak: [ˈslavɔmiːr]
Gendermasculine
Word/nameSlavic
Meaningslava ("glory, fame") + mir ("peace, world")
| Pronunciation | Serbo-Croatian: [slâʋomiːr] Czech: [ˈslavomiːr] Slovak: [ˈslavɔmiːr] |
|---|---|
| Gender | masculine |
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Slavic |
| Meaning | slava ("glory, fame") + mir ("peace, world") |
| Other names | |
| Alternative spelling | Slavomír |
| Nicknames | Slavo, Slávek and Slavko |
| Related names | Sławomir, Miroslav |
Th name consists of the Slavic elements slava ("glory, fame") and mir ("peace, world").[1][2]
The feminine form of the name is Slavomira or Slavomíra. Nicknames for the name include Slavo, Slávek and Slavko.
Notable people with the name
- Slavomir of Moravia, medieval duke
- Slavomir (Obotrite prince) (died 821), legendary tribal prince of the Obotrites
- Slavomír Bališ, Slovak football player
- Slavomír Bartoň, Czech ice hockey player
- Slavomir Gvozdenovici (born 1953), Romanian-Serbian writer, poet and politician
- Slavomír Kňazovický, Slovak sprint canoeist
- Slavomír Kica, Slovak football player
- Slavomir Miletić, Yugoslav sculptor from Bosnia and Herzegovina, now living in the Netherlands
- Slavomir Miklovš, Croatian cleric
- Slavomír Pagáč (born 7 January 1997), Slovak footballer
- Slavomír Pavličko, Slovak ice hockey player
- Jan Slavomír Tomíček, Czech writer
- Slavomir Vorobel (born 1971), Slovak ice hockey player
See also
- All pages with titles containing Slavomir
- Sławomir, Polish variant of the name
- Miroslav