Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the length is 7.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Adoniah f Biblical
Variant of 'Adoniyah and Adonijah, said to be the Cushite wife of Moses per the book of Jasher.
Adonica f English (Rare)
Elaboration of Adonia.
Adonisa f Occitan
Feminine form of Adonis.
Adorata f Romanian (Rare)
Derived from Romanian adorata, the feminine form of the adjective adorat, "adored".
Adorina f English
Elaboration of Adore.
Adorlée f French (Swiss, Rare)
Presumably an elaboration of Adorée.
Adreana f English
Variant of Adriana.
Adreena f English (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a variant of Adriana.
Adreona f English
Variant of Adriana.
Adriána f Hungarian (Rare), Slovak
Hungarian and Slovak form of Adriana.
Adriāna f Latvian
Latvian variant of Adriana.
Adriane f German (Rare)
Feminine form of Adrian.
Adrieli f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Brazilian feminine form of Adriel.
Adriena f Slovak
Variant of Adriana.
Adryann m & f Brazilian, English (Rare)
In Brazil and France, this name is considered a variant of Adrian and Adryan.... [more]
Adurata f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Adorata.
Adushka m & f Russian
Russian diminutive of various given names including Adam, Adavkt, Adrian and other names starting with the syllable ad.
Advaiti f Indian (Rare)
Derived from Sanskrit अद्वैती (advaitī) meaning "oneness, single, unique" (literally "one without a second, without duality").
Adventa f Indonesian
Elaboration of Advent.
Advesha f Hinduism
Means "harmless, not malevolent".
Advikie f Cornish (Archaic)
Cornish verison of Vicky.
Adwenna f Cornish, Welsh
Another form of Dwynwen, patron saint of sweethearts.
Aegiale f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Αἰγιάλη (Aigiale), derived from Greek αἰγιαλός (aigialos) meaning "beach, shore" (also see the masculine form Aigialos)... [more]
Aegidia f Late Roman
Feminine form of Aegidius.
Aegleis f Greek Mythology (Latinized)
Latinized form of Greek Αἰγληίς (Aigleis), a derivative of αἴγλη (aigle) meaning "radiance, splendour" (compare Aegle). In Greek mythology this name belonged to one of the Hyacinthides, the four daughters of Hyacinthus the Lacedaemonian, who was said to have moved to Athens and, in compliance with an oracle, to have caused his daughters to be sacrificed by the Athenians on the tomb of the Cyclops Geraestus for the purpose of delivering the city from famine and the plague, under which it was suffering during the war with Minos.
Ae-jeong f Korean
Means "love, affection", from Sino-Korean 愛情.
Ældiet f Medieval English
Variant of Ealdgyð found in Domesday Book.
Aelesia f Medieval English
Medieval English variant of Alicia.
Ælfrun f Anglo-Saxon
Derived from the Old English elements ælf "elf" and run "secret, mystery". It is a cognate of the Old Norse name Alfrún.
Aemelia f English
Alternate spelling of Aemilia. Some versions of Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors spell Aemelia this way.
Aemylia f Arthurian Cycle
A character in "The Faerie Queene" by Edmund Spenser.
Aeng-hwa f Korean
From Sino-Korean 櫻 (aeng) meaning "cherry, cherry blossom" combined with 花 (hwa) meaning "flower, bloom, anger".
Aeng-rim f Korean (Rare)
From Sino-Korean 櫻 meaning "cherry blossom" (aeng) and 林 meaning "forest, grove" (rim). This name can be spelled as Cheririn in Japanese.
Aeriana f English (Modern)
Variant of Ariana, influenced by Greek aer "air".
Ærinví f Old Norse
Old Norse name with several possible meanings. The first element can be derived from Old Norse ǫrn or ari, both meaning "eagle". It's also identical to Old Swedish ærin (Old Norse arinn) "hotbed, hearth"... [more]
Ærngun f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Æringunnr.
Aethusa f Greek Mythology
Aethusa was a daughter of Poseidon and the Pleiad Alcyone. She was also loved by Apollo.
Affiong f Efik
Variant of Effiong.
Affrica f Manx (Archaic)
Of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a Manx form of Affraic.
Affrosa f Medieval Italian
Italian saint, also known as St Dafrosa. Married to St Flavian.
Afogori m & f Bandial
Means "she/he gets buried around" in Bandial. This is considered a death prevention name.
Afomiya f Ethiopian (?)
Allegedly of Yoruba origins.
Afraima f Arabic (?)
Possible Arabic feminine variant of Ephraim.
Afrania f Ancient Roman, Portuguese (Brazilian), Spanish (Latin American)
Feminine form of Afranius. A bearer of this name was the ancient Roman woman Gaia Afrania, wife of the senator Licinius Buccio.
Afreeda f Bengali
Variant of Afrida.
Afrelia f History (Ecclesiastical)
Afrelia was a late 6th century saint, and princess of Powys. It has been suggested that she may be identical to the little-known Saint Arilda of Gloucester.
Áfríðr f Old Norse
Old Norse name with uncertain meaning. The first element Á- is possibly from either Old Norse áss "god", or *az "fear, terror, point, edge", or from *anu "ancestor". The second element is fríðr "beautiful, beloved"... [more]
Afriyie m & f Akan
Means "has appeared well" in Akan.
Afrodit f Turkish
Turkish version of the name Aphrodite.
Afroula f Greek
Diminutive of Afroditi.
Afrozeh f Arabic
Means "That which illuminates; bringer of light" in Arabic.
Afsheen f & m Urdu
Urdu form of Afshin, also used as a feminine name.
Agafija f Latvian, Lithuanian
Latvian and Lithuanian form of Agatha.
Agallis f Ancient Greek
Means "iris (flower)" in Greek, specifically referring to the Greek iris (Iris attica).
Agameda f Greek Mythology (Russified)
Serbian, Russian, Spanish and Basque form of Agamede.
Agamede f Greek Mythology
Means "very cunning", derived from Greek ἄγαν (agan) meaning "very much" and μήδεα (medea) meaning "plans, counsel, cunning"... [more]
Agapeta f Greenlandic
Feminine form of Agapetus.
Agapiya f Bulgarian (Rare)
Bulgarian form of Agape.
Agarita f Italian
Variant of Agar.
Agasaya f Near Eastern Mythology
Possibly means "shrieker". This was the name of an early Semitic goddess of war who was merged into Ishtar in her identity as fearless warrior of the sky.
Agathia f Obscure
Variant of Agatha.
Agathie f Greek (Rare), Greek (Cypriot, Rare)
Variant transliteration of Αγαθή (see Agathi and Agathy).
Agatija f Slovene
Slovene variant of Agata.
Agatina f Italian
Diminutive of Agata.
Agboola m & f Yoruba
Means "gathering of wealth" in Yoruba.
Agdlína f Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Agerica f Spanish
Female version of Agerico
Ãggâtât f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Agatha.
Aggusta f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Augusta.
Aghgyul f Armenian (Rare, Archaic, ?)
According to one online source, this is a rare Armenian name meaning "white rose" from Proto-Turkic *ak "white" and Persian گل (gol) "rose", 'now especially used in villages.'
Aghileh f Persian
Persian form of Aqila.
Aghunik f Armenian
Diminutive form of Aghavni.
Aghuveh m & f Armenian
Derived from the Armenian elements աղու (aghu) "suave" and վեհ (veh) "sublime".
Aginaga f Basque (Rare)
Derived from Basque hagin "yew (tree)" and the suffix -aga. It is also the name of a town in the Basque region of Spain, which is occasionally the inspiration behind this name.
Aglaida f Russian (Archaic), Bulgarian (Rare), Moldovan (Rare), History (Ecclesiastical)
Cognate of Aglaia. According to Orthodox Christian ecclesiastical traditions, Aglaida is venerated as a Virgin-Martyr alongside Saint Drosis.
Aglaope f Greek Mythology
Derived from the Greek adjective ἀγλαός (aglaos) meaning "splendid, shining, bright" (see Aglaos) combined with either the Greek noun ὄψ (ops) meaning "voice" or the Greek noun ὤψ (ops) meaning "eye, face, countenance".... [more]
Aglaura f Theatre
Aglaura is the eponymous character in a late Caroline era stage play, "Aglaura" written by Sir John Suckling.
Aglauro f Portuguese (Rare)
Portuguese form of Aglaurus.
Aglavra f Bulgarian (Rare)
Bulgarian form of Aglaurus.
Agneese f Medieval Flemish, Medieval Dutch
Medieval Dutch variant of Agnes.
Agnella f Neapolitan, Hungarian
Feminine form of Agnello.
Agneska f Slovak
Diminutive of Agnesa, not used as a given name in its own right.
Agnesse f Walloon
Walloon form of Agnes.
Agnetis f Dutch (Rare), English (Archaic), German (Archaic)
From Latin Agnetis, which is the genitive of the third declension of Agnes, the latinized form of the Greek name Hagne.... [more]
Agnetka f Polish (Rare)
Diminutive of Agneta.
Agniese f Dutch
Older form of Agneta.
Agnietė f Lithuanian
Diminutive of Agnė.
Agnieze f Medieval Dutch
Medieval variant of Agniese.
Agnoyaq f & m Inupiat (Modern)
Etymology unknown, mother of Iñupiaq writer Joan Naviyuk Kane.
Agušaya f Akkadian, Near Eastern Mythology
Means "the whirling dancer", deriving from the Akkadian words gâšum ("to dance") and gūštum ("dance"). Attested as an epithet for Ishtar in the Hymn of Agushaya.
Agustia f & m Indonesian
From the name of the month of August (Agustus in Indonesian).
Ahafiya f Belarusian
Variant Belarusian form of Agatha.
Ahahaya m & f Nahuatl
Possibly derived from ahahuiya "to rejoice, to celebrate, to take pleasure".
Ahapija f Belarusian
Possibly a Belarusian form of Agape.
Ah-byeol f & m Korean (Rare)
A combined with Byeol.
Ahhotep f Ancient Egyptian
From Egyptian jꜥḥ-ḥtp meaning "Iah is satisfied" or "the moon is content", derived from the name of the god Iah (literally "the moon") combined with ḥtp "peace, satisfaction"... [more]
Ahinara f Spanish
Variant of Ainara.
Ahinora f Bulgarian
Name born by German-Bulgarian singer Nora Nova, Ahinora Kumanova
Ahlayka f Ukrainian
Diminutive of Ahlaya.
Ahlheit f Low German (Archaic)
Low German variant of Adelheid used in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Ahlysia f Obscure
Variant of Alysia.
Ahsanat f Uzbek
Etymology uncertain, perhaps an Uzbek femnine form of Ahsan.
Ahteran f Turkish
Means "stars" in Turkish.
Ahtziri f Spanish (Mexican)
Possibly a variant of the name Yatziri. May be of Mayan or Aztec origin, with some sources claiming it means "corn flower" or "corn goddess".
Ahulani f Hawaiian
Means "sky alter" in Hawaiian, from the elements ahu, meaning "alter" and lani, meaning "sky, heaven".
Ahumere f Tahitian
Derived from Tahitian ahu meaning "clothes, tapa cloth" and mere meaning "parental grief, grief of a parent".
Ahurani f Near Eastern Mythology, Persian Mythology
Means "she who belongs to Ahura" in Avestan, from the name Ahura, referring to either the creator god Ahura Mazda or the various other ahuras of the Avesta, combined with the feminine suffix -ani meaning "companion, wife, mate"... [more]
Aiantze f Basque (Rare)
From the name of a town in the Basque region of Spain.
Aibhinn f Irish
Means "beautiful" or "the lovely one" in Irish. It's an alternate name for an Irish spirit and queen of the Banshees, also known as Aeval.
Aïchata f Western African
Western African elaboration of Aïcha (see Aisha).
Aichiyo f & m Japanese (Rare)
Combination of Ai 1 and Chiyo.... [more]
Aideliz f Spanish (Caribbean, Modern, Rare), American (Hispanic, Modern, Rare)
Meaning uncertain, perhaps an elaboration of Haydée or Aída using the popular name suffix liz (which in turn is derived from Lizbeth or a related name)... [more]
Aidoann f Literature
Means "moon" in the Romulan language created by Diane Duane for her non-canon series of science fiction novels Star Trek: Rihannsu.
Aieisha f Obscure
Variant of Aisha.
Aiganym f Kazakh
From Kazakh ай (ay) meaning "moon" and ханым (khanym) meaning "mistress, madam, lady".
Aigiarn f Medieval Mongolian
Means "shining moon" in Mongolian. This is the name of one of Kublai Khan's nieces.
Aignéas f Irish
Irish form of Agnes.
Aigustė f Lithuanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Aigustas. This name is not to be confused with Augustė.
Aijalon m & f Biblical, English (American, Rare), African American (Rare)
From an Old Testament place name meaning "place of gazelles" in Hebrew (compare Ayala). Aijalon or Ajalon was the name of several biblical locations, including the valley in Dan where the Israelites defeated the Amorites while the sun and moon stood still in answer to their leader Joshua's prayer.
Aijiong f Chinese
From the Chinese 嫒 (ài) meaning "daughter" and 炯 (jiǒng) meaning "bright, brilliant".
Aikerim f Kazakh, Kyrgyz
Variant transcription of Aigerim.
Ailaina f Scottish Gaelic (Modern, Rare)
Modern Scottish Gaelic origin, exact etymology unclear, meaning "noble one", "harmonious" and "cheerful". Possibly a combination of the names Alana and Eilidh, or an potential anglicization/variant of Eilionoir.
Aileana f Scottish
Feminine form of Ailean.
Aileena f English (Rare)
Elaborated form of Aileen.
Ailinel f Literature
Used by J.R.R. Tolkien, this is a Quenya name of unknown meaning. It likely comes from ailin meaning "lake" combined with the feminine suffix el.
Ailison f Scots
Scots form of Alison.
Ailtgüi f & m Mongolian
Means "fearless" in Mongolian.
Ailuros f Egyptian Mythology (Hellenized)
Means "cat" in Ancient Greek. The Egyptian goddess Bastet was known by this name in Ancient Greek religion.
Ailyene f American
Variant of Eileen.
Aimable f & m French (Archaic)
French form of Amabilis.
Aimilia f Ancient Roman (Hellenized), Greek
Hellenized form of Aemilia. Compare the masculine form Aimilios.
Ainagul f Kazakh
From Kazakh айна (aina) meaning "mirror" and гүл (gul) meaning "flower".
Ainakea f Hawaiian, Polynesian
Name of Hawaiian origin, composed by "aina", meaning "land" and "kea", meaning "white", "clear", so the meaning is "white land".
Aindavi f Sanskrit, Indian
Aindavi is sanskrit female name.... [more]
Ainelag f Manx (Modern, Rare)
Modern coinage derived from Manx ainle "angel" and the diminutive suffix -ag, this name is intended as a Manx equivalent to Angela.
Aing-ran f Korean
Stage name of actress Uhm In-gi.
Ainhara f Basque
Derived from Navarro-Lapurdian Basque ainhara "swallow (the bird)" (compare Ainara).
Ainhize f Basque
Taken from the name of a town, Ainhize-Monjolose, in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in southwestern France. It is located in the former province of Lower Navarre, not far from the "Croix de Galcetaburu", and used to be the town where meetings were held in Lower Navarre... [more]
Aininâĸ f Greenlandic (Archaic)
Possibly derived from Greenlandic aaniin "short time".
Aininur f Tatar
From the Arabic عَيْن‎ (ʿayn) meaning "eye" and نور (nur) meaning "light".
Ainitze f Basque (Modern)
From Basque ainitz meaning "much".
Aintsoa m & f Malagasy
From the Malagasy aina meaning "life" and soa meaning "good".
Airelle f French (Rare), English (Rare), Literature
Derived from airelle, the French name for the plant genus Vaccinium. The French derived the name from Portuguese airella, which in turn was derived from Latin atra "dark, black, gloomy".
Airuska f Finnish
Diminutive of Airi 2.
Aisezim f Kazakh
Alternate transcription of Kazakh Айсезім (see Aysezim).
Aisheja f History
Albanian form of Aisha, referring to Muhammad's third and youngest wife.
Aisivak f Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Aislynn f English (American, Modern), English (Canadian, Modern)
Variant of Aislinn. The pronunciation usually differs from the original Irish pronunciation of Aislinn or Aisling.
Aïssata f Western African
Form of Aisha used in parts of French-influenced western Africa.
Aisuluu f Kyrgyz
Alternate transcription of Kyrgyz Айсулуу (see Aysuluu).
Aiswari f Indian (Rare)
Means "one who belongs to Iswara (the Lord)" in Sanskrit.
Aithche f Medieval Irish
'The name of a holy virgin, patroness of Cill Aithche in the barony of Kenry, Co. Limerick, where her feast-day (Jan. 15) was formerly kept as a holiday and a station held.'
Aithusa f Greek Mythology (Latinized), Popular Culture
From Greek αἴθουσα (aithousa), a participle of the verb αἴθω (aitho) meaning "to light up". In Greek mythology, Aithousa (Latin: Aethusa) is the daughter of Poseidon and Alcyone, and a lover of Apollo (the Sun) with whom she had Eleuther... [more]
Aitilde f Medieval French
Derived from Old High German eit meaning "fire; brilliant" and Old High German hiltja meaning "battle".
Aiyanah f Obscure
Variant of Ayanna.
Aiyy Kuo f Yakut (Rare)
Means "beautiful Aiyy" from the name of the Yakut Aiyy deities combined with куо (kuo) meaning "beautiful".
Aizhana f Kazakh, Kyrgyz
Variant of Aizhan.
Aizheng m & f Chinese (Rare)
From the Chinese 爱 (ài) meaning "love" combined with 峥 (zhēng) meaning "high, noble". Other character combinations are possible.
Ajándék f Hungarian (Modern, Rare)
Directly taken from Hungarian ajándék "gift, present".
Ajaysia f African American (Modern, Rare)
Likely a combination of the phonetic elements a and jay and Asia 1, similarly to Anasia.
Ajchara f Thai
Alternate transcription of Thai อัจฉรา (see Atchara).
Ajewole m & f Yoruba
Means "the goddess Aje has entered this house" or "wealth has come in" in Yoruba, from ajé "wealth, prosperity" and wọle "enter into" (itself from wọ "to enter" and ilé "house, home").
Ajinoán f Biblical Spanish
Spanish form of Ahinoam, occurring in several Spanish translations of the Bible. It is not commonly used as a given name.
Ajllita f Aymara
Means "selected, chosen" in Aymara.
Ajtonka f Hungarian (Modern, Rare)
Modern coinage, intended as a feminine form of Ajtony.
Akaatta f Finnish
Finnish form of Agatha.
Akaiyah f African American (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a combination of the phonetic prefix a and Kaya 2. It shares a sound with names such as Makiyah.
Akakiya f Russian (Rare)
Feminine form of Akakiy.
Akaneko f Japanese (Rare)
From Akane combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child."... [more]
Akanesi f Tongan
Tongan form of Agnes.
Akanisi f Fijian
Fijian form of Angus.
Akariko f Japanese (Rare)
It could be from 朱 (aka) meaning "vermilion red" combined with 里 (ri) meaning "village", and 子 (ko) meaning "child, sign of the rat, first sign of the Chinese zodiac". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Akashia f African American (Rare)
Perhaps a variant of Acacia.
Akaysha f African American (Rare)
Possibly a phonetic spelling of Acacia.
Akaziwe f Nguni
Means "she must be introduced" in Nguni.
Akebono​ m & f Japanese (Rare)
From 曙 (akebono) meaning "dawn, daybreak," derived from a combination of 明け (ake) meaning "daybreak" and 仄 (hono) meaning "faint."... [more]
Akeelah f African American (Modern, Rare), South African (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Akilah popularized by the 2006 movie 'Akeelah and the Bee'.
Akeisha f African American
Combination of the prefix a and Keisha.
Ākenehi f Maori
Maori form of Agnes.
Akeneki f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Agnes.
Akihime f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 秋 (aki) meaning "autumn" or 章 (aki) meaning "chapter; section" combined with 姫 (hime) meaning "princess". Other kanji combinations are possible.... [more]
Akirako f Japanese (Rare)
From Akira combined with 子 (ko) meaning "child."... [more]
Akjemal f Turkmen (Rare)
From ak meaning "white" and Arabic and Arabic جمال (jamāl) meaning "beauty".
Akkumis f Kazakh
From Kazakh ақ (aq) meaning "white" and күміс (kümis) "silver".
Akkutlu f Turkish
From Turkish ak meaning "white" and kutlu meaning "happy, blessed".
Akomimm f & m Siksika
Means love in Sisiká (Blackfeet) language.
Akpoebi f & m Western African, Ijaw
Means "life is good" in Ijaw.
Aksaule f Kazakh
From Kazakh ақ (aq) meaning "white" and сәуле (saule) meaning "ray, sunbeam". This is also the Kazakh word for ageratum, a genus of flowers.
Aksella f Estonian (Rare)
Feminine form of Aksel.
Aksenia f Ukrainian, Bulgarian
Ukrainian cognate of Aksinya and Bulgarian variant of Axenia.
Akshata f Indian
Means "virgin, whole, uninjured" in Sanskrit. A known bearer of this name is Akshata Murty (1980-), the wife of the former British prime minister Rishi Sunak.
Akshaya f & m Indian, Tamil, Odia
Derived from Sanskrit अक्षय (akṣaya) meaning "eternal, imperishable" (literally "not decaying"). As a Tamil name, it is solely feminine, while it is masculine in Odia usage.
Akshika f Hinduism (Rare)
Derived from the Sanskrit word "Aksha", which means "eyes". Akshika has a feminine connotation and means "one with good eyes."
Akshita f Indian, Hindi
Feminine form of Akshit.
Akshiti f Sanskrit, Indian, Marathi, Hinduism, Hindi
Means "imperishableness; imperishable" in Sanskrit, Hindi and Marathi.
Aktoris f Greek Mythology
Possibly a feminine form of Aktor. This is the name of a handmaid of Penelope in Homer's epic the Odyssey.
Ākuhata m & f Maori
Maori form of August, Augustus or Augusta.
Akwokwo f African
Means "younger of twins" in Ga.
Alaaleh f Persian (Rare)
Variant transcription of Alaleh.
Alabama f English (American, Rare)
From the name of the American state (see Alabama). It was borne by a short-lived daughter of the novelist William Faulkner (11 January 1931-20 January 1931), who was named after his great-aunt Alabama 'Bama' McLean (1874-1968)... [more]
Aladina f Italian (Rare)
Italian feminine form of Aladdin.
Alaetra f African American
Perhaps an Anglicized variant of Elettra.
Alafare f English (Rare), Romani
Of uncertain meaning, possibly a corruption of Alethea (compare Alethaire). In the United States, this name was first found in 1768; in the United Kingdom, there were several uses throughout the 1800s (and most likely before that as well)... [more]
Alagard f Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Gothic alls "all" or from Gothic alhs (alah in Old High German) "temple." The second element is derived from gardan "to hedge in, to enclose, to fence in" or from Gothic gards "house, garden, (court)yard."
Alagund f Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Gothic alls "all" or from Gothic alhs (alah in Old High German) "temple." The second element is derived from Old High German gund "war."
Alahild f Germanic
The first element of this name is derived from Gothic alls "all" or from Gothic alhs (alah in Old High German) "temple." The second element is derived from Old Norse hildr "battle."
Alahtin f New World Mythology
The name of the Chumash goddess of the moon who also governs over purification, health and menstruation.
Alaídes f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Possibly a variant of Alaíde.
Alainah f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Variant of Alaina. 39 girls in the USA were named Alainah in 2011.
Alainne f Medieval French
Medieval French feminine form of Alain.
Alakika f Hawaiian (Rare)
Hawaiian form of Ardyce.