Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the ending sequence is a; and the number of syllables is 2.
gender
usage
ends with
syllables
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Calea f English
Variant of Kaylee or Kalea.
Cana f Various
From the name of the ancient city of Cana as mentioned in the New Testament, John 2:1-11, relating the story of Jesus's first miracle.
Cana m Anglo-Saxon
Old English byname of uncertain origin.
Candra m & f Indonesian
Means "moon" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit चन्द्र (chandra).
Capa m Sioux
Means "beaver" in Sioux.
Carda f German (Rare)
Short form of Ricarda.
Carra f English
A variant of the Irish name Cara meaning "Friend"
Caylea f English
Variant of Kaylee.
Ceana f Scottish Gaelic
Means "fair one" in Scottish Gaelic.
Ceca f Serbian
Diminutive of Cecilija and Svetlana.
Cedra f English (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Cedric. A famous namesake is the child actress in the 2018 movie Capernaüm, Cedra Izzam.
Celha f Occitan
Occitan form of Celia, also used as a contracted form of Ceselha.
Celtia f Galician (Modern, Rare)
From the Galician word celta ("Celt"), thus meaning "land of the Celts". This is the name that Galician writer Eduardo Pondal gives to Galicia, reclaiming it as the quintessential land of the Celts.
Cencia f Asturian
Feminine form of Cencio.
Ceola f Irish (Modern)
This is a modern Irish name, directly taken from Irish ceol meaning "music, singing".
Cesia f Silesian, Yiddish
Yiddish and Silesian short form of Cecylia.
Chaba f Thai
Means "hibiscus" in Thai.
Chacha f Japanese
From Japanese 茶 (cha) meaning "tea" combined with 々, a phonetic character indicting a duplication of the beginning kanji. Other kanji combinations are possible.
Chae-ha f Korean
From Sino-Korean 彩 (chae) meaning "color" combined with 霞 (ha) meaning "mist, haze, rosy clouds" or 夏 (ha) meaning "summer".
Chae-hwa f Korean
From Sino-Korean 彩 (chae) meaning "colour" combined with 花 (hwa) meaning "flower, bloom, anger" or 華 (hwa) meaning "flower, petal, China". This name can be formed using other hanja combinations as well.
Chaela f English (Rare)
English short form of Michaela, or a variant of Kayla.
Chaima f Aragonese (Rare)
Aragonese feminine form of James.
Chaiya m Thai
From Thai ไชย or ชัย (chai) meaning "victory".
Chakra m Khmer
Means "center of energy" in Khmer.
Champa f Indian, Hindi, Sinhalese
Means "frangipani (both plant and flower)" in Hindi, referring to a plant belonging to the Plumeria genus.
Chana f Japanese
From Japanese 茶 (cha) meaning "tea" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Chang-ha f Korean
From Sino-Korean 窗 (chang) meaning "window" combined with 夏 (ha) meaning "summer" or 霞 (ha) meaning "mist, haze, rosy clouds". This name can be formed using other hanja combinations as well.
Chansia f English (Modern, Rare)
Unknown. Also a locality in Ghana
Chanya f Thai
From Thai จรรยา (chanya) meaning "ethics, morals, conduct" or Pali jañña meaning "noble, pure".
Charma f English
Diminutive of Charmaine.
Chata m Japanese
From Japanese 茶 (cha) meaning "tea" combined with 太 (ta) meaning "thick, big". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Cheata f & m Khmer
Means "birth" in Khmer, ultimately from Sanskrit जात (jata).
Chedva f Jewish
Means "comradeship" in Hebrew.
Cheila f Portuguese
Portuguese form of Sheila.
Cheila f Spanish (Latin American, Modern), Spanish (Modern)
Spanish form of Sheila, reflecting the Spanish pronunciation of the English spelling.
Chella f & m Indian, Sanskrit
From Sanskrit ceta meaning "servant, slave (to God)".
Chella f Dutch (Rare), English, Jewish
Short form of feminine names that end in -chella, such as Michella and Rachella.... [more]
Chelsa f English
Variant of Chelsea.
Chenxia f Chinese
From the Chinese character 辰 (chén) or 晨 (chén), both meaning "morning" combined with 霞 (xiá) meaning "rosy clouds, mist" or 夏 (xià) meaning "summer, great, grand". Other character combinations can form this name as well.
Chessa f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Of uncertain origin and meaning. ... [more]
Cheyna f English
Variant of Shayna.
Chicca f Italian
Italian diminutive of Francesca.
Chiga f & m Japanese
From Japanese 千 (chi) meaning "thousand" combined with 賀 (ga) meaning "congratulate, greet, celebrate". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Chiha f Japanese
From Japanese 茅 (chi) meaning "miscanthus reed" or 千 (chi) meaning "thousand" combined with 波 (ha) meaning "wave", 羽 (ha) meaning "plume, feather" or 葉 (ha) meaning "leaf, needle, blade (of a plant)"... [more]
Chima f Japanese (Archaic)
During the Edo Period, it was written with the kanji that modernly means "space time, leave".
China f Japanese
From Japanese 千 (chi) meaning "thousand" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens", 奈 (na) meaning "what?, Nara, apple tree", 那 (na) meaning "what?" or 南 (na) meaning "south"... [more]
Chinda f & m Thai
Means "jewel, gemstone" in Thai.
Chinua m African, Nigerian, Igbo
meaning: god's own blessing... [more]
Chinya m Santali, Ho
Means "sing" in Santali and Ho.
Chipka m Ukrainian
Diminutive of Nychypir. Chipka (Nechypir) Varenychenko is the main character of classic novel 'Do oxen low when mangers are full?' by Panas Myrnyi and Ivan Bilyk.
Chira f Kurdish
Means "lantern" in Kurdish.
Chira m Thai
Means "long, long-lasting, long time" in Thai.
Chisa f Japanese
From 千 (chi) meaning "thousand" and 桜 (sa) meaning "cherry blossom". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Chitra f Indian, Marathi, Bengali, Hindi, Assamese, Odia, Thai
Means "bright, clear" or "jewel, ornament, picture" in Sanskrit.
Chittra f Thai
Alternate transcription of Chitra.
Chiwa f Japanese
From Japanese 千 (chi) meaning "thousand", 智 (chi) meaning "wisdom, intellect" or 散 (chi) meaning "scatter" combined with 和 (wa) meaning "peace, harmony". Other kanji combinations are also possible.
Chiya f Japanese
From Japanese 千 (chi) meaning "thousand" combined with 夜 (ya) meaning "night". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Chloa f English
Latinate or Elaborated form of Chloe.
Cho-a f Korean
From Sino-Korean 草 (cho) "grass, straw, thatch, herbs" and 娥 (a) "be beautiful; good".
Choćka m Belarusian (Archaic)
Derived from Belarusian хацець (chacieć) meaning "to want, to desire". This name was given to a long-desired child.
Cho-ja f Korean
From Sino-Korean 英 (cho) meaning "glass, crystal" and 子 (ja) meaning "child". Other hanja character combinations can form this name as well. Feminine names ending with the character 子 (a fashionable name suffix in Japan, read as -ko in Japanese) were popular in Korea during the period of Japanese rule (1910-1945)... [more]
Chona f Spanish (Philippines)
Short form of names ending in -cion, such as Concepcion or Consolacion.
Chorcha f Aragonese (Rare)
Aragonese feminine form of Jorge.
Chuangxia f Chinese
From the Chinese character 窗 (chuāng) meaning "window" combined with 霞 (xiá) meaning "rosy clouds, mist" or 夏 (xià) meaning "summer, great, grand". ... [more]
Chu-hua f Chinese
Chu-hua is a girl's name of Chinese origin. Meaning "chrysanthemum"
Chula f Chickasaw, Choctaw
Means "fox" in Choctaw and Chickasaw. It is uncertain whether this is a traditional Choctaw (or Chickasaw) name.
Chula m & f Thai
Means "star-shaped kite" or "excellent, beautiful, ravishing" in Thai.
Chungda m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Tibetan ཆུང་བདག (see Chungdak).
Chunhua f & m Chinese
From Chinese 春 (chūn) meaning "spring (the season)" combined with 华 (huá) meaning "splendid, illustrious, flowery, Chinese" or 花 (huā) meaning "flower, blossom"... [more]
Chun-hwa f Korean
From Sino-Korean 春 (chun) "spring" and 華 (hwa) "flowery; illustrious" or 花 (hwa) "flower; blossoms".
Chun-ja f Korean
From Sino-Korean 春 "spring" and 子 "child". Chun-ja was the tenth-most popular name for Korean girls born in 1940. The same characters can be read Haruko in Japanese... [more]
Chura f & m Japanese (Rare)
From the stem of Okinawan adjective 美/清らさん (churasan) meaning "beautiful, lovely," cognate to Japanese 清ら (kiyora), an archaic term referring to elegant and dazzling beauty, otherwise the stem of 清らか (kiyoraka) meaning "clean, pure, chaste."... [more]
Chuuya m Japanese
From Japanese 中 (chuu) meaning "China" combined with 也 (ya) meaning "also". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Chuva f Portuguese
From Portuguese chuva meaning "rain".
Cia f Swedish (Rare)
Short form of Cecilia and Carina 2, or a variant of Kia and Sia.
Ciba f Romani (Caló)
Means "marvel, wonder" in Caló. This name is used as the Caló form of Maravilla.
Cíla f Czech
Diminutive of Cecilie.
Cinja f German (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Maybe a variant of Sinja.... [more]
Cinna m Ancient Roman
Roman cognomen of uncertain meaning. This was the name of a Roman politician who was the father-in-law of Julius Caesar.
Cinta f Spanish (European), Catalan
Means "ribbon" in Spanish and is taken from the Spanish title of the Virgin Mary Virgen de la Cinta.
Cipta m & f Indonesian
Means "ability to create, creative force" in Indonesian, ultimately from Sanskrit चित्त (citta).
Cisca f Dutch
Dutch short form of Francisca. A known bearer of this name is Cisca Dresselhuys, a Dutch journalist and feminist.
Ciska f Dutch, Limburgish
Dutch and Limburgish short form for both Francisca and Franciska - one could also label it a variant spelling for Cisca (though out of the two, Ciska is certainly the most common).
Cita f Spanish (Philippines)
Short form of Carmencita, Pacita, and other names ending in -cita.
Citra f Literature
Invented by Neal Shusterman for the main character in his book series "Scythe", first released in 2016.
Clea f English (Rare), German (Rare), Portuguese (Brazilian), Literature
Latinate form of Cleo apparently coined by British novelist Lawrence Durrell for a character in his Alexandria Quartet. A known bearer is American actress Clea DuVall (1977-).
Cleda f English (American, Rare)
Possibly a variant of Cleta.
Clella f American
Feminine of Clelland or Clellan or due to the comparative rarity of the male names, perhaps a rhyming form of Ella 1.
Cleta f English (American, Rare), Catalan (Rare)
English feminine form of Cletus and Catalan short form of Anacleta.
Clizia f Italian
Italian form of Clytia.
Cloya f Asturian
Feminine form of Cloyo.
Cobra m English (American, Rare)
From Portuguese cobra from the latin colubra meaning "snake."
Coca f Romanian
Diminutive of Cornelia.
Cocoa f & m Pet, English (American, Rare)
Either a variant of Coco or from the English word cocoa for the cocoa bean. The word cocoa comes from the Spanish word cacao, which is derived from the Nahuatl word cacahuatl... [more]
Coda m & f Various (Rare)
Variant of Koda.
Coila f Literature
Coila was the muse of the poet Robert Burns, he created her as a poetic device for many of his poems. The name derives from the poetic name for the area of Kyle, Ayrshire, which itself is derived from the male names Coil, Coilus or Coel Hen, King of the Picts, who lived, ruled and died in the area.
Coosa f Creek
Short form of Coosaponakeesa.
Corda f English
Either a diminutive of Cordelia or from the Latin corda meaning "hearts."
Coya f Asturian
Variant of Coalla.
Críonna f Irish (Modern)
This is a modern Irish name which is directly derived from Irish críonna meaning "wise".
Csinszka f Hungarian
A pet name created by Endre Ady, for his wife Berta Boncza, from the word 'csacsi' meaning "small donkey".
Cuba f English (American, Rare)
Derived from the place name Cuba, which refers to an island and country in the Caribbean Sea. It rose in popularity in the United States in 1898, when Spain lost the colony of Cuba during the Spanish-American War.
Cuca f Spanish
Diminutive of Pilar, Refugio, Concepción and other feminine names, from the diminutive ending -uca... [more]
Cueva f Spanish (European, Rare)
From the Spanish word cueva meaning "cave", itself from the title of Mary Virgen de la Cueva ("Our Lady of the Cave"), belonging to the town of Esparragosa de Lares (Badajoz, Spain).
Cuixia f Chinese
From Chinese 翠 (cuì) meaning "bluish-green, green jade" combined with 霞 (xiá) meaning "rosy clouds, mist". Other character combinations can form this name as well.
Cyhha m Anglo-Saxon
An unrecorded Old English name, the meaning of which is uncertain. It was perhaps a nickname derived from Proto-Germanic *kokh- "cough".
Cysa f Medieval German
Of unknown origin, maybe a hypochoristic form of names containing sigu "victory".
Czeszka f Kashubian
Kashubian diminutive of Czesława.
Dacia f Ancient Roman, Italian, Sicilian
Feminine form of Dacius and Dacio.
Dæja f Icelandic (Modern, Rare)
Of unknown origin and meaning.
Daeva m & f Sanskrit, Hinduism
Alternate transcription of Sanskrit देव (see Deva).
Daezja f American
Variant of Deja.
Daffa m Indonesian
Likely derived from Arabic ضفة (daffah) meaning "bank, shore".
Daga f Swedish, Danish (Rare)
Feminine form of Dag as well as a short form of names beginning with Dag-.
Dagna f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Dagny.
Dahna f Korean
This name means a sprout that is young and grows into a mature plant.
Daila f Latvian
Derived from Latvian daile "beauty".
Daisha f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Of uncertain origin and meaning.... [more]
Daiva m & f Sanskrit, Hinduism
Alternate transcription of Sanskrit देव (see Deva).
Daizha f & m African American
Variant of Deja.
Dala f Arabic
Shortened version of Dalal.
Dalià f Malagasy
Malagasy form of Dahlia.
Dama f & m Chinese
Combination of Da and Ma.
Dana f Chinese
Combination of Da and Na.
Dana f & m Sorbian, Polish, Hungarian
Feminine short form of Danuta, Danisława, Bohdana and Danijela or Daniella and masculine short form of Danijel.
Dana f Slavic Mythology
Dana is a rusalka in Slavic Mythology.
Dana f Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian, Montenegrin
Shortened form of the name Danica, meaning the planet Venus, symbol of dawn and beauty. “Dan” means day.
Danya f Ukrainian, Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Darya 1 or Daryna (Darina 2 in Russian).
Dara f Indonesian
Means dove or virgin/maiden in Indonesian.
Darcia f English (Rare), Dutch (Rare), Spanish (Mexican, Rare), Swiss (Rare)
In English-speaking countries, this name is probably a variant of Darcy, one that may have been inspired by the name Marcia.... [more]
Darya f Hebrew (Modern)
Combination of the name Dar, means "(mother of) pearl" with the letters יה (ya) (which are part of the name of God) means "Pearl of God" in Hebrew.
Dashea f & m African American
Variant of Dashay.
Dasia f Russian (?)
Variant of Dasha.
Dasia f African American (Modern)
Variant of Deja, possibly influenced by the spelling of Asia.
Dawna f English
Variant of Donna with the influence of "Dawn".
Daya f & m Chinese (Modern)
Combination of Da and Ya.
Dayla f English (American)
Possibly a feminine form of Dale, or a variant of Dahlia.
Daysha f African American (Modern)
Variant of Deja, or simply a combination of the popular phonetic elements day and sha.
Dea f Georgian
Short form of Medea.
Dea f Hungarian
Short form of Adeodáta.
Decca f English
Likely a variant of Deca, influenced by the famous record label Decca Records, founded in 1929 in England. Could also be a variable for any name containing the element -dec/k-.
Decha m Thai
Derived from Thai เดช (det) meaning "power, might, authority".
Dedda f East Frisian (Rare, Archaic)
East Frisian from of Theoda and other names containing the name element þeoda "people".
Deesha f Hindi
Alternate transcription of Disha.
Deeta f Santali, Hinduism
Alternative Santali name of the Hindu goddess Lakshmi.
Degna f Italian (Archaic), Sardinian (Archaic)
Italian and Sardinian form of Digna. In modern Italian, degna also means "worthy, deserving".
Deirdra f English
Variant of Deirdre.
Deita f Romansh
Romansh short form of Margareta, traditionally found in the Surselva region.
Deka f & m African
An African name of unknown origin, this unisex baby name means "pleasing".
Dela f Zulu (Rare)
Dela. in Zulu it means to become whole, to feel complete and satisfied.
Dela f Lithuanian (Rare)
Lithuanian form of Della.
Delpha f English (American, Rare)
Possibly originated as a short form of Philadelphia or Delphine.
Demna m Georgian
Diminutive of Demetre, which is now also used as an independent name.... [more]
Denia f Greek
Diminutive of Dionysia.
Deva m & f Sanskrit, Hinduism
Meaning "deity" in Sanskrit, referring to any benevolent spirit or supernatural being. The devas (also known as suras) in Hinduism maintaine the realms as ordained by the Trimurti and are often warring with their equally powerful counterparts, the Asuras... [more]
Deva f Asturian (Modern), Galician (Modern), Spanish (Modern)
From the name of several rivers in northern Spain, chiefly river Deva in Cantabria and Asturias and two tributaries of river Minho in Galicia. The name ultimately comes from Proto-Celtic *dēiwā meaning "goddess".
Devya f Dogri
Means "God's gift" in Dogri.
Dewa m Balinese
Means "god, deity" in Balinese, ultimately from Sanskrit देव (deva).
Dhana f Obscure
Possibly a variant of Dana 1. This name was brought to limited public attention in 1964, when a character in the film 'The 7th Dawn' was named Dhana.
Dhia m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ضياء (see Ziya).
Dia f African, Mbama
Means "love" in Lembaama.
Diba f Persian
Means "brocade" in Persian.
Didra f Hungarian
Cogane of Deirdre, meaning "daughter".
Dika f Swedish
Diminutive of Fredrika.
Diljá f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Delia 1.
Dinda f Indonesian
Short form of Adinda.
Dinja f Dutch
A variant form of Dina 1 or Dina 2. The Dutch name Dina comes most often from shortening feminine names ending in -dina (like Bernhardina or Arendina); it is also the Dutch form of the Biblical name Dinah.... [more]
Diosa f Spanish, Filipino
Means "goddess" in Spanish.
Diphda f Astronomy
From Arabic ضِفْدَع‎ (ḍifda') "frog", taken from the phrase ضفدع الثاني (aḍ-ḍifdaʿ aṯ-ṯānī) meaning "the second frog". This is the name of a star in the constellation Cetus.
Disa f Swedish, Old Swedish
From a medieval Swedish form of the Old Norse name Dísa, a short form of other feminine names containing the element dís "goddess". This is the name of a genus of South African orchids, which honours a heroine in Swedish legend... [more]
Disya m & f Russian
Diminutive of Denis or Diana.
Dita f Dutch, German, Latvian
Dutch and German short form of names beginning with diet-, such as Dietlinde. This name also got adopted into Latvian usage.
Diva f English (Rare)
From Italian diva (“diva, goddess”), from Latin dīva (“goddess”), female of dīvus (“divine, divine one; notably a deified mortal”).
Diwa f & m Filipino, Tagalog
Means "spirit, soul, essence" in Tagalog.
Diyaa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ضياء (see Ziya).
Diyosa f Filipino, Tagalog
Means "goddess" in Tagalog.
Djoja f Bosnian (Archaic)
Possibly a cognate of Gaya. Alternatively, it could be derived from the Spanish word joya, meaning "jewel".
Doba f Jewish, Hebrew, Yiddish
Probably a Yiddish short form of Dvorah influenced by Slavic dobro, "good".... [more]
Đoja f Bosnian (Archaic)
Variant transcription of Djoja.
Doja f Korean
From Sino-Korean 桃 (do) meaning "peach" combined with 子 (ja) meaning "child". This name can be formed using other hanja combinations as well.
Dona f Judeo-Spanish, Judeo-Catalan, Judeo-Italian
Derived from Italian donna or Spanish doña, both meaning "lady".
Dong-ha m Korean
From Sino-Korean 東 (dong) meaning "east" combined with 河 (ha) meaning "river". Other hanja combinations are possible. ... [more]
Donghua m & f Chinese
From Chinese 东 (dōng) meaning "east" combined with 华 (huá) meaning "splendid, illustrious, flowery, Chinese"... [more]
Donja f Esperanto
Spelling variant of Donya.
Donja f Russian (Rare), Dutch, German (Rare), Swedish (Rare)
Alternate transcription of Russian Доня (see Donya). In languages other than Russian, the name Donja can also be derived from the Spanish word doña meaning "lady", in which case it is a more phonetical spelling of the word.... [more]
Dora f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Dor.
Doriya f Hebrew (Rare)
Combination of the names Dori (or Dor), means "(my) generation" with the letters יה (which are part of the name of God).
Dorja f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene short form of Doroteja.
Dorla f English (Modern)
A combination of Dora and Darla.
Dorotha f English
Variant of Dorothy.
Dota f German (Modern, Rare)
German short form of the name Dorothea.
Dounia f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Maghrebi transcription of Dunia used in Morocco and Algeria.
Drella m & f Popular Culture
A nickname for Andy Warhol used by his friends, a combination of Dracula and Cinderella.
Drema f English
Either a variant of Dreama, or from the Slavic surname derived from Proto-Slavic *drěmati "to sleep, nap, doze".
Dreya f English (Rare)
Short form of Andrea 2.
Drina f Serbian (Rare)
The name of the river that flows between Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, whose name is derived from the Latin name of the river (Latin: Drinus) which in turn is derived from Greek (Ancient Greek: Dreinos), used as a feminine name.
Drissa m Western African
Form of Idris 1 used in parts of western Africa.
Dua f Albanian
Derived from Albanian dua "I want; I love".
Duangta f Thai
Means "eye" in Thai.
Dubra f Galician (Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the name of the river Dubra in the province of A Coruña in Galicia, itself from Proto-Celtic dubros "water".
Đuka m & f Croatian, Serbian
Diminutive/nickname for Đuro or Đurđa.
Dukpa m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan འབྲུག་པ ('brug-pa) meaning "Bhutanese (person)", also referring to a school of Tibetan Buddhism (the Drukpa Kagyu).
Dula f Ancient Greek
Short form of Theodula.
Dulia f Asturian, Galician
Short form of Odulia.
Duma m Swahili
Means "cheetah" in Swahili.... [more]
Dumka m Santali, Ho
Possibly derived from Dumka: a city in Bihar, India.
Duna f Spanish, Catalan
Possibly derived from the Spanish and Catalan word duna, meaning "dune". Alternatively, it could be a variant of Dunia or a form of Dunya... [more]
Dunia f & m Arabic, Swahili, Spanish, Galician
Derived from Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā) "world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)".
Dunya f Arabic
Derived from Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā) "world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)".
Đura m Croatian, Serbian
Croatian and Serbian form of George.
Durna f Azerbaijani
Derived from Azerbaijani durna "crane (bird)", ultimately from Proto-Turkic *durunja. The crane is sometimes seen as a symbol of peace.
Duša f Slovak
Diminutive of Dušana, not used as a given name in its own right.
Duša f Croatian, Slovene, Serbian
Derived from Slavic dusha meaning "soul, spirit".
Duttá m Sami
Possibly derived from Sami duttat "to be content, satisfied".
Dwaina f English
Feminine form of Dwain.
Dwayna f American (Rare)
Variant of Duana with the spelling of Dwayne.
Dyela f Haitian Creole
Derived from Haitian Creole dye "god" and la "there; here" with the intended meaning of "God is here".
Dyhia f Berber
Variant of Dihya.
Dyna f English
Variant of Dina 2.
Džejna f Bosnian
Short form of Džejlana.
E-a f Korean (Rare)
variant of "e-ah"
Ea f & m Japanese
From Japanese 依 (e) meaning "reliant, depend on, consequently, therefore, due to", 咲 (e) meaning "blossom", 恵 (e) meaning "favor, blessing, grace, kindness", 愛 (e) meaning "love, affection", 映 (e) meaning "reflect, reflection, projection", 枝 (e) meaning "bough, branch, twig, limb", 栄 (e) meaning "flourish, prosperity, honor, glory, splendor", 歩 (e) meaning "walk", 永 (e) meaning "eternity, long, lengthy", 江 (e) meaning "creek, inlet, bay", 瑛 (e) meaning "sparkle of jewelry, crystal", 空 (e) meaning "sky", 笑 (e) meaning "laugh", 絵 (e) meaning "picture, drawing, painting, sketch", 英 (e) meaning "hero, outstanding", 衣 (e) meaning "garment, clothes, dressing", 詠 (e) meaning "recitation, poem, song, composing" or 風 (e) meaning "wind, air, style, manner" combined with 愛 (a) meaning "love, affection", 逢 (a) meaning "meeting, tryst, date, rendezvous", 亜 (a) meaning "second, Asia", 安 (a) meaning "relax, cheap, low, quiet, rested, contented, peaceful", 杏 (a) meaning "apricot", 阿 (a) meaning "flatter, fawn upon, corner, nook, recess", 空 (a) meaning "sky", 気 (a) meaning "spirit, mind, air, atmosphere, mood", 雨 (a) meaning "rain", 明 (a) meaning "bright, light", 歩 (a) meaning "walk" or 彩 (a) meaning "colour"... [more]
Eachna f Irish Mythology, Old Irish
Probably derived from Old Irish ech "horse" combined with a diminutive suffix. In Irish mythology, Eachna was a daughter of a king of Connacht, famed for her skill at chess.
Éada f Irish (Modern)
A modern Irish name, most like influenced by the more frequently used Irish name Éadaoin, which derives from Irish éad (coming from Old Irish ét) meaning "jealousy, passion"... [more]
Eaindra f Burmese
From the name of the Hindu god Indra.
Éala f Irish (Modern)
This is a modern Irish name that has most likely been influenced by the Irish word eala meaning "swan". However, contrarily to the Irish word for "swan", which is spelled without the fada, the fada has been added to the name to get the desired pronounciation of EH-la whereas the word eala is pronounced AL-la... [more]
Ealga f Irish (Rare)
Means "noble, brave", taken from the Irish Inis Ealga "Noble Isle", which was a poetic name for Ireland.
Eda m Czech
Short form of Eduard and Edvard, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Eedla f Finnish
Finnish variant of Edla, rarer than the original form.
Eema f Popular Culture
This is the name of a Styracosaurus from Disney's "Dinosaur".
Eesha f Sanskrit
Eesha is a feminine name of Sanskrit origin that means "wish, desire, divine, regal, supreme, pure, life, alive".
Effa f English
Variant of Aoife.
Efva f Swedish (Rare)
Variant of Eva.
Ehra f Romani
Not available.... [more]
Ehva f Swedish (Rare)
Variant of Eva.
Eifa f Irish
Variant of Aoife.
Eifa f Arabic
Means "to keep one's promise" in Arabic.
Eila f Medieval German
Short form of Eiliswintha and other feminine names derived from the Germanic name element agil "edge (of a sword)".
Eindra f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese အိန္ဒြာ (see Eaindra).
Eisa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Isa 1.
Eisha m & f English
Possibly a variant of Aisha.
Eissa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic عيسى (see Isa 1).
Eita m Japanese
This name combines 瑛 (ei) meaning "sparkle of jewelry, crystal ball," 栄 (ei, you, e, saka.eru, ha.e, ha.eru, -ba.e) meaning "flourish, glory, honour, prosper," 英 (ei, hanabusa) meaning "excellent, outstanding," 永 (ei, naga.i) meaning "eternity, long, everlasting," 詠 (ei, uta.u, yo.mu) meaning "compose, poem, recite, song," 鋭 (ei, surudo.i) meaning "sharp, keen" or 衛 (e, ei) meaning "defense, protection" with 太 (ta, tai, futo.i, futo.ru) meaning "big, plump, thick" or 多 (ta, oo.i, masa.ni, masa.ru) meaning "frequent, many, much."... [more]
Ela f Slovak
Originally a diminutive of Helena and Eleonóra, now used as a given name in its own right.
Ela f Sanskrit, Indian
Derived from Sanskrit एला (elaa) which means "the earth; cardamom".
Elcia f Polish
Diminutive of Elżbieta.
Élia f French
French form of Aelia.
Ełła f Polish (Archaic)
Archaic diminutive of Elżbieta.
Elska f Low German (Rare)
Low German diminutive of Elisabeth.
Elya f & m Hebrew (Rare)
Variant of Eliya.
Elya f Russian
Short form of Eleonora, Elena and other names with a similar sound.
Elza m English (American), Hebrew
Possibly a variant or short form of Eliezer used in the Southern United States.
Emà f Occitan
Occitan variant of Emma.
Emka f Croatian, Kashubian
Croatian diminutive of Ema 1 and Kashubian diminutive of Éma.
Ena f Japanese
From Japanese 映 (e) meaning "reflect, projection", 栄 (e) meaning "flourish, prosperity, honor, glory, splendor", 永 (e) meaning "eternity, long, lengthy", 榎 (e) meaning "Chinese hackberry", 慧 (e) meaning "wise" or 惠 (e) meaning "blessing, grace, favor, kindness" combined with 生 (na) meaning "life, genuine, birth" or 和 (na) meaning "harmony, peace, tranquility, Japan"... [more]
Engla f Swedish, Finland Swedish, Norwegian (Rare), Danish (Rare), Icelandic (Modern)
Strictly feminine form of the Old German name Engel as well as a Swedish dialectal form of Ingel. ... [more]
Enja f German
Probably a hypochoristic form of Anna.
Enna f Literature, Various
Probably a variant of Ena or Énna.... [more]
Enna f Japanese
From Japanese 苑 (en) meaning "pasture, park, garden" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Erka f Germanic Mythology, German (Modern, Rare)
A short form derived from Old High German erkan "pure, genuine".... [more]