Signified's Personal Name List
Arkansas
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Pronounced: AHR-kən-saw(American English)
Rating: 65% based on 2 votes
Berlin
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: Various
Pronounced: bər-LIN(English) behr-LEEN(German)
Rating: 60% based on 3 votes
From the name of the city in Germany, which is of uncertain meaning.
California
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Rating: 75% based on 2 votes
From the name of the American state, whose name probably derives from the fictional Island of California ruled by Queen
Calafia in the 16th century novel Las sergas de Esplandián by García Ordóñez de Montalvo.
Columba
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: Late Roman
Pronounced: ko-LOOM-ba(Late Latin) kə-LUM-bə(English)
Rating: 35% based on 2 votes
Late Latin name meaning
"dove". The dove is a symbol of the Holy Spirit in Christianity. This was the name of several early
saints both masculine and feminine, most notably the 6th-century Irish monk Saint Columba (or Colum) who established a monastery on the island of Iona off the coast of Scotland. He is credited with the conversion of Scotland to Christianity.
Dakota
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: də-KO-tə
Rating: 75% based on 2 votes
From the name of the Native American people of the northern Mississippi Valley, or from the two American states that were named for them: North and South Dakota (until 1889 unified as the Dakota Territory). The tribal name means
"allies, friends" in the Dakota language.
It was rare as an American given name before 1975. In the mid-1980s it began growing in popularity for boys after a character by this name began appearing on the soap opera Ryan's Hope. It is now more common as a feminine name, probably due to the fame of the actress Dakota Fanning (1994-).
England
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English
Rating: 55% based on 2 votes
The name England is derived from the Old English name Englaland, which means "land of the Angles".
English
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: EENG-lish
Rating: 5% based on 2 votes
Transferred use of the surname
English.
Georgia
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Greek
Other Scripts: Γεωργία(Greek)
Pronounced: JAWR-jə(English) yeh-or-YEE-a(Greek)
Rating: 85% based on 2 votes
Latinate feminine form of
George. This is the name of an American state, which was named after the British king George II. The country of Georgia has an unrelated etymology. A famous bearer was the American painter Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986).
Idaho
Gender: Masculine
Usage: American (Rare)
Rating: 55% based on 2 votes
From the name of a state in the United States of America. The name of the state was made in the early 1860s, when the United States Congress was considering organizing a new territory in the Rocky Mountains, eccentric lobbyist George M. Willing suggested the name "Idaho", which he claimed was derived from a Shoshone language term meaning "the sun comes from the mountains" or "gem of the mountains".
India
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Spanish (Modern)
Pronounced: IN-dee-ə(English) EEN-dya(Spanish)
Rating: 75% based on 2 votes
From the name of the country, which is itself derived from the name of the Indus River. The river's name is ultimately from Sanskrit
सिन्धु (Sindhu) meaning "body of trembling water, river". India Wilkes is a character in the novel
Gone with the Wind (1936) by Margaret Mitchell.
Indianna
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Rare)
Rating: 85% based on 2 votes
Iowa
Gender: Feminine
Usage: American (Modern)
Pronounced: IE-o-ə, IE-ə-wə
Rating: 65% based on 2 votes
By way of French Aiouez, from the Dakota word ayúxba/ayuxwe and named after the Iowa tribe. The name seems to have no further known etymology though some give it the meaning "sleepy ones".
Jersey
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: jer-see
Rating: 70% based on 2 votes
From the name of the island Jersey (located in the English Channel between the UK and France) whose name was derived from the Old Norse name element
-ey "island" combined with either Old Norse
Geirr ("Geirr's island"),
jarl ("the earl's island") or
hjǫrr ("sword island").
Kansas
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Rare)
Rating: 80% based on 2 votes
From the US state name.
Mississippi
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: Mis-is-IP-pee
Rating: 50% based on 2 votes
French word derived from the Ojibwe word misi-ziibi meaning "great river."
Montana
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: mahn-TAN-ə
Rating: 55% based on 2 votes
From the name of the American state, which is derived from Latin montanus "mountainous".
Nebraska
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Rating: 60% based on 2 votes
Nebraska is derived from transliteration of the archaic Otoe words Ñí Brásge (contemporary Otoe Ñí Bráhge), or the Omaha Ní Btháska meaning "flat water", after the Platte River that flows through the state.
Nevada
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: nə-VAD-ə
Rating: 60% based on 2 votes
From the name of the American state, which means "snow-capped" in Spanish.
Paris 1
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Greek Mythology
Other Scripts: Πάρις(Ancient Greek)
Pronounced: PA-REES(Classical Greek) PAR-is(English) PEHR-is(English)
Rating: 73% based on 3 votes
Meaning unknown, possibly of Luwian or Hittite origin. In Greek
mythology he was the Trojan prince who kidnapped
Helen and began the Trojan War. Though presented as a somewhat of a coward in the
Iliad, he did manage to slay the great hero
Achilles. He was himself eventually slain in battle by Philoctetes.
Paris 2
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Various
Pronounced: PAR-is(English) PEHR-is(English)
Rating: 67% based on 3 votes
From the name of the capital city of France, which got its name from the Gaulish tribe known as the Parisii. In America the popularity of this name spiked up and then down between 2003 and 2006, around the time that the television personality and socialite Paris Hilton (1981-) was at the height of her fame.
Rhode
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Ancient Greek [1], Biblical Greek [2], Biblical Latin
Other Scripts: Ῥόδη(Ancient Greek)
Rating: 50% based on 2 votes
Rio 1
Gender: Masculine & Feminine
Usage: Various
Rating: 40% based on 2 votes
Means "river" in Spanish or Portuguese. A city in Brazil bears this name. Its full name is Rio de Janeiro, which means "river of January", so named because the first explorers came to the harbour in January and mistakenly thought it was a river mouth.
Savannah
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English
Pronounced: sə-VAN-ə
Rating: 60% based on 2 votes
From the English word for the large grassy plain, ultimately deriving from the Taino (Native American) word zabana. It came into use as a given name in America in the 19th century. It was revived in the 1980s by the movie Savannah Smiles (1982).
Washington
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English, Spanish (Latin American), Portuguese (Brazilian)
Pronounced: WAHSH-ing-tən(English) WA-sheen-ton(Spanish) WA-seen-ton(Spanish) WA-sheeng-ton(Spanish) WAW-sheen-ton(Portuguese)
Rating: 50% based on 2 votes
From a surname that was originally derived from the name of an English town, itself meaning
"settlement belonging to Wassa's people". The given name is usually given in honour of George Washington (1732-1799), commander of the Continental Army during the American Revolution and the first president of the United States.
Wyoming
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: American
Rating: 70% based on 2 votes
York
Gender: Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: YAWRK
Rating: 55% based on 2 votes
From an English surname that was derived from York, the name of a city in northern England. The city name was originally
Eburacon, Latinized as
Eboracum, meaning "yew" in Brythonic. In the Anglo-Saxon period it was corrupted to
Eoforwic, as if from Old English
eofor "boar" and
wic "village". This was rendered as
Jórvík by the Vikings and eventually reduced to
York.
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