ew314's Personal Name List

Anouk
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Dutch, French
Pronounced: a-NOOK(Dutch)
Rating: 38% based on 16 votes
Dutch and French diminutive of Anna.
Anoushka
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Hindi, Sinhalese
Other Scripts: अनुष्का(Hindi) අනුෂ්කා(Sinhala)
Rating: 45% based on 16 votes
Alternate transcription of Hindi अनुष्का or Sinhala අනුෂ්කා (see Anushka).
Astrid
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, German, French, English
Pronounced: AS-strid(Swedish) AHS-tri(Norwegian) AS-trit(German) AS-TREED(French) AS-trid(English)
Rating: 50% based on 16 votes
Modern Scandinavian form of Ástríðr. This name was borne by the Swedish writer Astrid Lindgren (1907-2002), the author of Pippi Longstocking. It was also borne by a Swedish princess (1905-1935) who became the queen of Belgium as the wife of Leopold III.
Flora
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Dutch, French, Greek, Albanian, Roman Mythology
Other Scripts: Φλώρα(Greek)
Pronounced: FLAWR-ə(English) FLAW-ra(Italian) FLO-ra(Spanish, German, Dutch, Latin) FLAW-ru(Portuguese) FLAW-RA(French)
Rating: 64% based on 15 votes
Derived from Latin flos meaning "flower" (genitive case floris). Flora was the Roman goddess of flowers and spring, the wife of Zephyr the west wind. It has been used as a given name since the Renaissance, starting in France. In Scotland it was sometimes used as an Anglicized form of Fionnghuala.
Ines
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Italian, Slovene, Croatian
Rating: 48% based on 13 votes
Italian, Slovene and Croatian form of Inés.
Mabli
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: MAB-lee
Rating: 33% based on 12 votes
Welsh form of Mabel. It was coined circa 1900.
Meg
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: MEHG
Rating: 40% based on 13 votes
Medieval diminutive of Margaret. It is now also used as a short form of the related name Megan.
Merryn
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Cornish
Rating: 44% based on 13 votes
Meaning unknown. This was the name of an early Cornish (male) saint.
Nell
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: NEHL
Rating: 44% based on 16 votes
Medieval diminutive of names beginning with El, such as Eleanor, Ellen 1 or Helen. It may have arisen from the medieval affectionate phrase mine El, which was later reinterpreted as my Nel.
Wren
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: REHN
Rating: 51% based on 14 votes
From the English word for the small songbird. It is ultimately derived from Old English wrenna.
Zara 1
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Literature, English
Pronounced: ZAHR-ə(English)
Rating: 54% based on 15 votes
Used by William Congreve for a character in his tragedy The Mourning Bride (1697), where it belongs to a captive North African queen. Congreve may have based it on the Arabic name Zahra 1. In 1736 the English writer Aaron Hill used it to translate Zaïre for his popular adaptation of Voltaire's French play Zaïre (1732).

In England the name was popularized when Princess Anne gave it to her daughter in 1981. Use of the name may also be influenced by the trendy Spanish clothing retailer Zara.

Zosia
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Polish
Pronounced: ZAW-sha
Rating: 58% based on 16 votes
Diminutive of Zofia.
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