View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Facts] Re: Meaning of Binisha for baby girl
in reply to a message by Susan
Binisha appears most common in India and the near East (https://www.linkedin.com/pub/dir/?first=binisha&last=&search=Search&searchType=fps and http://www.name-list.net/facebook/firstname/Binisha) so it's origin may lie in that region... I can't find an meaning or origin for it anywhere though, but given it's likely region of origin, it's probably a variant of another, more common name. What, I'm not sure, but maybe someone else more familiar with those areas and the languages there could be of more help? Sorry!
My PNL = http://www.behindthename.com/pnl/37275Top: Henry & Lara (main) / Caspian & Briar (GP) / James & Georgiana (top25)
Bottom: Randall & Memphis (main) / Dinadan & Melpomene (GP) / Owain & Itonia (top25)
vote up1vote down

Replies

In Eastern India, the labiodental (v- like sound) of Western Indian turns into the bilabial b-. I have seen both the vinishA and binishA spellings. Since vi- is a common prefix, with semantic scope ranging from opposition or separation, including negation, to specialization and hence superlative, and nishA is a common word meaning night, the combination sounds Sanskrit, even though no meaning can be discerned. It could mean possibly "nightless" but it is far more likely that it is a made up word patterned after the English Vanessa using Sanskrit/Western Indian phonotactics. With vinishA in existence, binishA follows as the name moves east. All this is rather a baseless conjecture, though.
vote up1vote down