Bojan
Bojan | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | [ˈbojan] |
Gender | male |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Slavic |
Word/name | boj "battle" |
Derivation | boj- (root) + an (suffix) |
Other names | |
Related names | Boyan |
Look up Bojan in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Bojan (Slovenian, Serbian Latin and Croatian: Bojan; Serbian Cyrillic and Macedonian: Бојан; Russian and Bulgarian Cyrillic: Боян, transcribed Boyan) is a Slavic given name, derived from the Slavic noun boj "battle." The ending -an is a suffix frequently found in anthroponyms of Slavic origin. The name is recorded in historical sources among the Slovenes, Serbs, Bulgarians, Czechs, Poles, Croats, Slovenians, Macedonians and Russians.[1] In Slovenia, it is the 18th most popular name for males, as of 2010.[2]
People named Bojan:
- Boyan-Enravota, the first Bulgarian Christian martyr and the earliest Bulgarian saint
- Bojan Bogdanović, a Croatian basketball player
- Bojan Djordjic, a Swedish footballer of Serbian descent
- Bojan Jokić, a Slovenian football player
- Bojan Jorgačević, a Serbian football player
- Bojan Jovanovski - Macedonian TV personality
- Bojan Križaj, a Slovenian alpine skier
- Bojan Krkić, a Spanish footballer of Serbian-Catalan descent
- Bojan Marović, a Montenegrin singer
- Bojan Neziri, a Serbian football player of Albanian descent
- Bojan Šarčević, a Bosnian-French visual artist
- Bojan Zdešar, a Slovenian freestyle swimmer
- Bojan Zulfikarpašić, French-Serbian jazz pianist
See also
References
- ↑ Miklosich, Franz (1860). Die Bildung der slavischen Personennamen (in German). Vienna: Aus der kaiserlich-königlichen Hoff- und Staatdruckerei. pp. 10, 36.
- ↑ "Število moških z imenom BOJAN: 10.544 (ali 1,0 % vseh moških)" (in Slovenian). Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia.
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