Felix

From a Roman cognomen meaning "lucky, successful" in Latin. It was acquired as an agnomen, or nickname, by the 1st-century BC Roman general Sulla. It also appears in the New Testament belonging to the governor of Judea who imprisoned Saint Paul.... [more]

EQUIVALENTS
ANCIENT ROMAN: Felix
BIBLICAL GREEK: Phelix
BIBLICAL LATIN: Felix
BIBLICAL: Felix
CATALAN: Feliu
DANISH: Felix
DUTCH: Felix
ENGLISH: Felix
FRENCH: Félix
GERMAN: Felix
ITALIAN: Felice
NORWEGIAN: Felix
POLISH: Feliks
PORTUGUESE: Félix
ROMANIAN: Felix
RUSSIAN: Feliks
SLOVENE: Feliks
SPANISH: Félix
SWEDISH: Felix
OTHER FORMS
AFRICAN AMERICAN: Kalisha, Talisha
DUTCH: Felicia
ENGLISH: Felicia, Lecia, Lisha
FRENCH: Félicie, Félicien, Félicienne
GERMAN: Felicie
HUNGARIAN: Felícia, Felicia
ITALIAN: Feliciana, Feliciano
LATE ROMAN: Felicia, Feliciana, Felicianus, Felicius
POLISH: Felicja, Felicjan
PORTUGUESE: Felícia, Feliciano
ROMANIAN: Felicia
SPANISH: Felicia, Feliciana, Feliciano
SWEDISH: Felicia