Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the length is 6.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Aabaar m & f Akan
Aabira f Arabic
Means "fleeting, transient, passing by" or "interpreting" in Arabic.
Aabroo f Dari Persian
Means “dignity” in Dari.
Aacine f Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Possibly a variant of Åsine.
Aadhya f Hindi
Means "original power" or "first creator" in Sanskrit.
Aafiya f Arabic
Means “health, freedom from illness”. Derived from the Arabic root AIN-F-A, meaning "to forgive, to cure."
Aafrae f Arabic (Maghrebi, Rare)
Alternate transcription of Arabic عفرا (see Afra 2) chiefly used in North Africa.
Aagaat f Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Feminine form of Aage, or perhaps a variant spelling of Ågot.
Aaisha f Urdu
Urdu form of Aisha.
Ååjjaž f Skolt Sami
Skolt Sami form of Eugenia.
Aakaja f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Âkaja.
Aakeeq f Greenlandic
Younger form of Âkêĸ.
Aakooq f Greenlandic
Younger form of Akoĸ.
Aakulu f Greenlandic
Means "sweet little one" in Greenlandic.
Aalari f Greenlandic
Younger form of Âlare.
Aalaya f Odia
Means "home and refuge" in Odia.
Aaliit f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Alice.
Aalish f Manx
Manx form of Alice.
Aaliya f Pakistani
Variant of Aaliyah.
Aaljet f East Frisian (Archaic)
Possibly a variation of Aalheit.
Aaltje f Dutch, Frisian
Diminutive of Adelheid.
Aameen f & m Arabic
Means "oh Allah, accept our prayer" in Arabic. This is a cognate of the English word amen.
Aanaya f Indian (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a variant of the Sanskrit Anaya or as a modern English name, a variant of Anaya.
Aanord f Germanic
A shortened version of Adamardis or Adenordis.
Aaqqat f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Ârĸat.
Aarani f & m Indian, Tamil
Variant of Arani.
Aaraya f & m Indian (Rare)
Variant of Arya 1.
Aarica f American (Rare)
Variant of Erica influenced by the spelling of Aaron.
Aarifa f Arabic, Indian (Muslim)
Feminine form of Arif.
Aarini f Indian (Rare), Bengali (Rare), Hindi
Means "adventurous, courageous" in Hindi.
Aarisa f Persian
Variant of Areesa.
Aariya f Various
Possibly a variant of Aariyah.
Aarohi f Hindi, Sanskrit
Means "rising" in Sanskrit.
Aarona f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Aaron.
Aaruna f & m Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Âruna.
Aarynn f English
alternative feminized form of Aaron
Aashvi f Hindi
Means "blessed and victorious" or "little mare" in Hindi.
Aasifa f Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic آصفة or Urdu آصفہ (see Asifa).
Aasiya f Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic آسيا or آسية or Urdu آسیہ (see Asiya).
Aasmae f Arabic (Maghrebi, Rare)
Alternate transcription of Arabic أسماء (see Asma) chiefly used in North Africa.
Aastha f Indian
Means "faith" in Hindi.
Aatika f Arabic
Means "pure, generous" in Arabic. May be a variant of Atika.
Aaviak f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Auiak.
Ababuo f African
Ababuo means a child that keeps coming back. This name is mainly used in Ghana
Abacil f Hungarian (Archaic)
Found in the Arvisurák (Arvisuras), an eclectic system of myths and a book summarising the beliefs contained in them, written down by Zoltán Paál. Not supported by scholars.
Abadan f Turkmen
Means "love of peace" in Turkmen.
Abadia f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Derived from Portuguese abadia "abbey", this name is usually used in reference to the title of the Virgin Mary Nossa Senhora da Abadia "Our Lady of the Abbey". The title itself goes back to a Marian apparition near the Abadia do Bouro in Braga, Portugal... [more]
Abagbe f Nigerian
The meaning of Abagbe is we begged to have this one to lift up
Abahai f & m Manchu
A short Manchu form of Tiancong, meaning “Heavenly Ruler”. Best known as one of the Manchu titles of Hong Taiji.
Abaigh f Irish (Rare)
Irish form of Abby.
Abarne f Basque (Rare)
Basque feminine equivalent of Ramos.
Abayie m & f Akan
Means "has come well" in Akan.
Abbula f Gaulish
Derived from Gaulish *abalo- "apple".
Abdona f Spanish (Rare)
Feminine form of Abdón.
Abeeha f Pakistani
Variant of Abiha.
Abeima f Manipuri
Means "little girl" in Meitei.
Abeira f Arabic
From the Arabic عَبِير‎ (ʕabīr) meaning "scent, perfume".
Abejul m & f Bandial
Means "the one who pouts" in Bandial.
Abelìa f Provençal, Niçard
Niçard form of Abélie.
Abelia f Spanish (Rare), Catalan (Rare)
Feminine form of Abel. Abelia is also a type of flowering shrub in the honeysuckle family, named after British surgeon and naturalist Clarke Abel (1780-1826).
Abelke f Low German
German diminutive of Abela and Abelina.
Abella f Spanish
From the Spanish surname, which originated in the region of Galicia. The name was originally a Catalan nickname for a bee-keeper or person with bee-like behaviors. It is derived from the Spanish word ‘abeja,’ meaning "bee," which itself is derived from Latin apicula.
Abelle f French (Rare)
French feminine form of Abel.
Abequa f Ojibwe
Variant of Abeque.
Abeque f Ojibwe
Possibly means "she stays at home" in Ojibwe, from Ojibwe abi "s/he is at home, sits in a certain place" and ishkwii "s/he stays behind" or nazhikewabi/anzhikewabi "s/he lives alone, is home alone, sits alone".
Aberah f Hebrew
Variant transcription of Abira.
Aberfa f Welsh
Means "from the mouth of the river" in Welsh.
Abesti f Basque (Rare)
Coined by Sabino Arana Goiri who based the name on Basque abes "to sing" and the suffix -ti. According to R. M. Azkue, by 1927 abesti had acquired the meaning "song" and has been in everyday use as a synonym for the older kanta ever since.
Abeytu f Omaha-Ponca
Meaning "Green Leaf" in Omaha-Ponca.
Abhaya f Sanskrit, Indian
Means "fearless" in Sanskrit.
Abiáta f Hungarian
Of unknown origin and meaning.
Abidat f Avar, Kumyk, Dargin, Lezgin, Lak
Form of Abida used in Dagestan.
Abieta f Basque (Rare, Archaic)
From the name of a town in the Basque region of Spain.
Abigal f Biblical Hebrew, Biblical, Romani (Archaic)
Variant of Abigail. In some Bible translations Abigal is mentioned as the daughter of Nacha and the mother of Amasa.
Abigay f Medieval French, Medieval Walloon
Medieval French and Medieval Walloon form of Abigail.
Abinus m & f Urdu
Urdu form of Abnus
Abiona f & m Yoruba
Means "born during a journey" or "born into the arts" in Yoruba, from "to give birth, be born" and "to, on" combined with either ọ̀nà "way, road, journey" or ọ̀nà "art, artistry, craftsmanship"... [more]
Abisak f & m Armenian (Archaic)
Armenian form of Abishag.
Abluna f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Apollonia.
Abnātu f Babylonian
Means "precious stone", deriving from the Akkadian word aban nisiqtu ("a choice stone, a precious stone, a gem").
Abnoba f Celtic Mythology
The name of an obscure Gaulish goddess, thought to be connected to Celtic abona "river" (source of Avon). The second element may be derived from either Proto-Indo-European nogʷo-, meaning "naked, nude" or "tree", or the verbal root *nebh- "burst out, be damp".
Abraar f & m Arabic
Variant transcription of أبرار (see Abrar).
Abrama f & m English (Rare), Indonesian (Rare), Italian (Archaic)
Variant or feminine form of Abram 1 and Abramo.
Abreea f American
Possibly an elaboration of Bree, using a as both a prefix and a suffix.
Abrion m & f French
Variant of Aubrey.
Abrish f Arabic
Means "Allah ki rehmat" in Arabic.
Abruna f Gaulish
Derived from Gaulish *bronnio- / *brunnio- "breast, bosom".
Abuchi m & f Igbo
Means "song of God" in Igbo.
Abungu f Luo
Means "of the forest" in Luo.
A-byeol f & m Korean (Rare)
Varaint of Ah-byeol.
Abyzou f Near Eastern Mythology
Appears to be a corrupted form of the Greek ἄβυσσος ábyssos "abyss", the Greek itself was borrowed from Akkadian Apsu or Sumerian Abzu.
Abzyan f Udmurt
Derived from Arabic أَب‎ (ab) meaning "father" and Persian جان‎ (jan) meaning "soul".
Acadia f American (Rare), Spanish (Mexican, Rare)
From the name of a colony in New France in North America, derived from Arcadia and coinciding with Mi'kmaq suffix -akadie, meaning "place of abundance"... [more]
Acadie f French (Rare)
French form of Acadia.
Acalle f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Form of Acacallis found in the Bibliotheca, a compendium of Greek myths.
Acamma f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Alternate transcription of Achamma.
Acarsu f Turkish
Means "stream, river, running water" in Turkish.
Acaste f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Ἂκαστη (Akaste), which is the feminine form of Akastos (see Acastus). This name is borne by two characters in Greek mythology... [more]
Accama f Indian (Christian), Malayalam
Alternate transcription of Achamma.
Açelya f Turkish
Derived from Turkish açelya "azalea".
Achaia f Greek Mythology, English (Rare)
Of uncertain etymology, possibly derived from Greek ἄχος (achos) meaning "grief, pain, distress" (also see Achaios, Achilles)... [more]
Achala f Indian, Sanskrit
Derived from Sanskrit achala "constant; unceasing" and "the earth".
Achali m & f Biblical
Variant transcription of Ahlai.... [more]
Achall f Irish Mythology
Achall, daughter of Cairbre Nia Fer, king of Tara, and his wife Fedelm Noíchrothach, is a minor character from the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology. After her brother Erc was killed by Conall Cernach, she died of grief on a hill near Tara, which was named Achall after her.
Achara f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อัจฉรา (see Atchara).
Achena f Obscure
This has been explained as a Greek name meaning "Achaean, of Achaea" (also compare Achaeus)... [more]
Achiko m & f Shona
A shorter form of the name Achiriko, meaning "one who remained" or "one who is still there".
Achina f Chuukese
Means "good" in Chuukese.
Achipo f Shona
Meaning "one who remains" or "one who is still here".
Achsia f English (American, Archaic)
Possibly an elaboration of Achsah.
Achtan f Irish Mythology, Celtic Mythology
The Irish heroine who bore Cormac, the king.
Aciana f Spanish
Feminine form of Aciano. Means “cornflower”
Aclima f Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
Meaning unknown. In some religious traditions, this is the name of the first human female born, a daughter of Adam and Eve.
Acraea f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Ἀκραία (Akraia), an epithet of numerous goddesses whose temples were situated on hills or mountains, including Athena and Hera, which meant "of the heights" or "dwelling on the heights"... [more]
Actaea f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Aktaie and Aktaia, both of which derive from Greek ἁκτή (akte) "headland, sea-coast, shore" (compare the masculine equivalent Aktaios and its latinized form Actaeus)... [more]
Aculia f Gaulish
Derived from Gaulish *acu- "quick, fast".
Acutia f Ancient Roman
Feminine form of Acutius.
Adabel f English, Spanish (Latin American)
Combination of Ada 1 and the popular name suffix bel.
Adacia f English (American, Rare)
Meaning uncertain. This name may possibly be a combination of the name Ada 1 with any feminine name ending in -cia, such as Acacia, Alicia, Felicia and Patricia.
Adaego f Igbo
Means "daughter of money" in Igbo.
Adaire f English (Rare)
Feminine variant of Adair.
Adalee f English (Rare)
Combination of Ada 1 and Lee.
Adalei f English
Modern variant of Adelie.
Adamae f English
Combination of Ada 1 and Mae.
Adamia f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Adam.
Adamma f Igbo
Means "daughter of beauty" in Igbo.
Adamma f Hurrian Mythology, Semitic Mythology
Etymology uncertain, possibly deriving from the Eblaite element ʾdm ("blood, red"). Name borne by a goddess of the Eblaite pantheon who was later incorporated into the Hurrian pantheon.
Adanel f Literature
A character in JRR Tolkien's works. Likely from the fictional Sindarin language, a compoound of adan "man, human" and the feminine suffix el.
Adanya f African American (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Adanna used in the United States.
Adaobi f Nigerian
Means first Daughter of The Family.
Adaora f Igbo
Means "the people's daughter" in Igbo.
Adaria f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of the names Adara or Daria.
Adarja f Belarusian
Variant transcription of Adarya.
Adarka f Belarusian, Russian (Rare)
Belarusian and Russian form of Odarka.
Adarna f Filipino, Tagalog
From the name of a magical bird in Filipino folklore.
Adassa f Guanche, Spanish (Canarian)
From Guanche *sseḍs, meaning "laughter".
Adassa f Biblical Italian, Caribbean, Haitian Creole, Jamaican Patois
Form of Hadassah used in some Italian translations of the Bible.
Adatte f Medieval French, French (Archaic)
Archaic French name of unkown origin and meaning. It seems to have been a local name only found in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region.
Adayah f Hebrew
Variant of Adaiah.
Adberg f Medieval German
Derived from Old High German ōt "wealth, riches" and berg "mountain, hill".
Addell f Luxembourgish (Archaic)
Luxembourgish form of Adèle.
Addson m & f English
Contracted form of Addison.
Adeeba f Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic أديبة or Urdu ادیبہ (see Adiba).
Adeela f Arabic, Urdu
Alternate transcription of Arabic عادلة (see Adila), as well as the Urdu form.
Adeele f Estonian
Estonian form of Adele.
Adeena f Hebrew
a variant of Adina
Adeike f & m Yoruba
Means "one who has crowned your care" in Yoruba, from adé "crown" and ìkẹ́ "fondness, care, cherishing".
Adeiza f Nigerian
Name of Nigerian origin, meaning "giver (father) of good things" or "giver (father) of wealth".
Adelah f English
Variant of Adela
Adelén f Obscure
Accented form of Adelen, borne by Spanish-Norwegian singer Adelén (b. 1996).
Adelen f Norwegian
Variant of Adelene (see Adelaide).
Adélia f Hungarian (Rare), Portuguese
Hungarian and Portuguese form of Adelia. Also compare Amélia versus Amelia.... [more]
Adelìa f Provençal, Niçard
Niçard form of Adelia.
Adelie f English (Rare), Medieval English
Anglicized form of Adélie and medieval English short form of Adelicia.
Adelin f & m Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare), Finnish (Rare), Medieval French, Romanian, Lengadocian, Gascon, Niçard
Scandinavian feminine variant of Adelina, Romanian, Languedocian, Niçard and Gascon masculine form of Adelina and medieval French masculine form of Adeline.
Adelis f German, Germanic
From the Old Germanic name Adalheidis (See Adelaide). It means "noble", "noble kind", "nobility", etc.
Adeliz f Breton
Variant of Aziliz.
Adelja f Belarusian
Variant transliteration of Адэля (see Adelya).
Adélka f Czech, Kashubian
Czech and Kashubian diminutive of Adéla as well as a Kashubian diminutive of Adélajda.
Adelka f Slovak
Diminutive of Adela.
Adelya f Russian, Belarusian
Russian and Belarusian form of Adela.
Adelys f Spanish (Latin American, Rare)
Hispanic variant of Adelissa (compare Adelise).
Adenir m & f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Apparently a rhyming variant of Ademir.
Adeńka f Polish
Diminutive of Ada 1.
Adeona f Roman Mythology
The Roman goddess who guides the child back home, after it has left the parental house for the first time and monitored its coming and going in learning to walk.
Aderet f Hebrew (Rare)
Aderet comes from Ezekiel 17:8, meaning "glorious" in the phrase לְגֶ֥פֶן אַדָּֽרֶת (legefen ’addaret) "a glorious vine", a symbol of reborn Israel.... [more]
Adesua f Edo
Variant of Adesuwa.... [more]
Adhika f Filipino, Tagalog, Cebuano
Derived from Tagalog and Cebuano adhika meaning "zeal, ambition, honorable objective".
Adhira m & f Indian, Hindi, Sanskrit
Means "impatient, hasty" in Sanskrit.
Adhraa f Arabic
Meaning is Virgin Mary.
Adiaba f Efik
Means "first daughter" in Efik.
Adiana f Various
Possibly a variant of Diana or an elaboration of Adi. In Latin American cultures, this may have come from an alternative name for the Adzaneni language. The name has been in use since the late 1890s.
Adibah f Arabic, Malay
Alternate transcription of Arabic أديبة (see Adiba), as well as a Malay variant.
Adibeh f Persian
Persian form of Adiba.
Adigun m & f Yoruba
Means "bound upright" in Yoruba, figuratively "well-planned and successful".
Adikia f Greek Mythology
Means "injustice, iniquity" in Greek, derived from ἀ (a), a negative prefix, and δίκη (dike) "justice"... [more]
Adilah f Arabic, Malay, Indonesian
Alternate transcription of Arabic عادلة (see Adila), as well as the Malay and Indonesian form.
Adília f Portuguese
Variant of Adélia, which is the Hungarian and Portuguese form of Adelia.... [more]
Adilia f Flemish
Cognate of Adilie.
Adilie f Walloon, Louisiana Creole
Variant of Adèle (compare Adélie). Sainte Adèle d'Orp-le-Grand (also known as Adilie) is particularly venerated in Wallonia.
Adilma f Portuguese (Brazilian)
This name is probably a short form of Adilmara. But in other words, you could also say that this name is a (Brazilian) variant form of Adelma.
Adilya f Hebrew
is derived from adi עדי combined with יה Ya (Yahweh) meaning "Jewel of Yahweh"
Adilye f Crimean Tatar
Crimean Tatar feminine form of Adil.
Adinai f Kyrgyz
Variant transcription of Adinay.
Adinay f Kyrgyz
Derived from Persian آدینه (âdine) meaning "Friday" combined with Kyrgyz ай (ay) meaning "moon".
Adinda f Indonesian, Dutch, Literature
Means "sister" or "eldest daughter" (a formal, poetic term) in Indonesian. The name was used by Dutch writer Eduard Douwes Dekker (1820-1887), better known by his pen name Multatuli, for one of the eponymous characters in his story "Saïdjah and Adinda" in his 1860 novel Max Havelaar.
Adipaz f & m Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the name Adi 1 and Paz 2 means "golden jewel" in Hebrew.
Adisai m & f Thai
Means "excellent, superb" in Thai.
Adison m & f English
Variant of Addison, though it is also possible that this name is a variant of Edison in some cases.
Aditri f Indian
Highest honor, learned one
Adiyaa m & f Mongolian
Mongolian form of Sanskrit Aditya.
Adjoua f Baoulé
Derived from Baoulé jɔlɛ "Tuesday", referring to the day of the week on which the child was born and hence to be understood as "born on Tuesday".
Adléta f Czech (Rare)
Old Czech form of Adéla.
Adline f American
Variant of Adeline.
Admeta f Italian
Feminine form of Admeto.
Admete f Greek Mythology
Feminine form of Admetos. This name belonged to two characters in Greek mythology: the daughter of King Eurystheus (for whom Herakles stole the girdle of Hippolyta), and one of the Oceanids.
Admira f Bosnian, Slovene
Feminine form of Admir. A known bearer of this name was the Bosniak woman Admira Ismić (1968-1993), who was killed by snipers when she and her Serbian boyfriend Boško Brkić (1968-1993) were trying to cross a bridge in Sarajevo... [more]
Admire f & m English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Admire, or directly from the English word admire.
Adnisa f African American
Feminine form of Adnis.
Adofìa f Occitan
Occitan form of Adolpha.
Adolat f Uzbek, Tajik
Means "justice" in Uzbek and Tajik, ultimately from Arabic عَدَلَ ('adala) meaning "to act justly".
Adongo m & f Luo
Means "second of the twins" in Luo.
Adonia f English (Modern)
Feminine form of Adonis
Adonna f English (American, Rare)
Possibly a feminine form of Adonis, influenced by Donna.
Adorae f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Adorée, or perhaps an elaboration of Adore using the phonetic element ray.
Adorée f Various
Means "adored" in French. It is not commonly used as a name in France itself. Bearer Adorée Villany (born 1891) was a French dancer and dance theorist.
Adoria f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Adora.