Submitted Names Matching Pattern *i*a

This is a list of submitted names in which the pattern is *i*a.
gender
usage
pattern
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Sabira f Arabic, Urdu, Kyrgyz, Kazakh
Feminine form of Sabir.
Sabirə f Azerbaijani
Feminine form of Sabir.
Sabïrbikä f Bashkir
From Bashkir сабыр (sabïr) meaning "patience, patient" and feminine name element бикә (bikä).
Sabita f Indian, Bengali, Odia, Assamese
Bengali, Odia and Assamese form of Savita.
Sabitha f Indian
Means "beautiful sunshine" in many Indian languages.
Sabria f Various
The name Sabria may be a simplification of the Arabic name Sabriyya "patient" of a short form of Sabrina.... [more]
Sabriina f Finnish
Finnish form of Sabrina.
Sabrína f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Sabrina.
Sabrīna f Latvian
Latvian form of Sabrina.
Sabrina f Arabic (Rare), Indian (Muslim, Rare)
Means "patience" in Arabic, derived from Arabic صَبَرَ (ṣabara) meaning "to be patient, to have patience".
Sabrinita f Spanish
Spanish diminutive of Sabrina.
Sacharissa f Literature
Based on Latin sacharum "sugar". This name was invented by poet Edmund Waller (1606-1687), who used it as a nickname for Lady Dorothy Sidney, countess of Sunderland.
Sachasisa f Quechua
Means "jungle flower" in Quechua, from sacha, "jungle" and sisa, "flower".
Sachat’ika f Quechua
Means "tree flower" in Quechua.
Sachia f Japanese
From Japanese 幸 (sachi) meaning "happiness" combined with 亜 (a) meaning "second, Asia" or 愛 (a) meaning "love, affection". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sachiha f Japanese (Rare)
From 幸 (sachi) meaning "happiness, good fortune" and 葉 (ha) meaning "leaf, needle, blade". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Sachika f Japanese
From Japanese 幸 (sachi) meaning "happiness" combined with 愛 (ka) meaning "love, affection", 加 (ka) meaning "increase", 佳 (ka) meaning "good, beautiful", 夏 (ka) meaning "summer", 歌 (ka) meaning "song, poetry", 花 (ka) or 華 (ka) which both mean "flower" or 香 (ka) meaning "fragrance"... [more]
Sachina f Japanese
From Japanese 幸 (sachi) meaning "happiness" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sachita f Indian, Marathi, Nepali
Feminine form of Sachit.
Sachithra m & f Sinhalese
From Sanskrit सत्य (satyá) meaning "real, true, honest" and चित्र (citrá) meaning "bright, visible, clear".
Saddia f Arabic
Variant of Saadia.
Sadija m & f Bosnian
Bosnian male variant and feminine form of Sa'di.
Sadika f Bosnian, Arabic
Feminine form of Sadik.
Sa'diposhsha f Uzbek
Derived from the Arabic masculine name Sa'di and poshsha , an endearing term for a girl or woman.
Sadiqa f Arabic, Urdu
Feminine form of Sadiq.
Sadira f Persian
Persian form of Sidra.
Sa'diya f Arabic, Uzbek
Alternate transcription of Arabic Sa'dia as well as the Uzbek form of the name
Sæfinna f Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic feminine form of Sæfinnur.
Saeida f & m Arabic
Means "HAPPY" in Arabic.
Saemira f Albanian (Rare)
Derived from Albanian sa "so; how (much)", the particle e and mirë "good".
Saffia f Arabic
Possibly a variant of Safia.
Saffronia f English
Variant spelling of Sophronia. It could also possibly be a more feminine and elaborate version of Saffron. This name is mentioned in the Nina Simone song, “Four Women”.
Şafiga f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shafiqa
Šafiğa f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Shafiqa.
Safija f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Safiyyah.
Safija f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Sophia.
Safina f Scandinavian
Means "sapphire"
Şəfiqə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shafiqa.
Sagaria m Afrikaans
Afrikaans form of Zachariah.
Sagarika f Bengali, Odia, Sinhalese
From Sanskrit सागरिक (sāgarika) meaning "oceanic, of the ocean".
Säğdiä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Sa'dia.
Säğiđä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Sa'ida.
Sagitta f Ancient Roman, Astronomy, Swedish (Rare)
Means "arrow" in Latin. ... [more]
Saguira f Filipino, Maguindanao
Possibly a form of Shakira.
Sahaiʔa f Chipewyan
Roughly translates to: “as the sun breaks through the clouds" or "over the horizon.” This name became notable in 2015 when a mother in the Northwest Territories of Canada was forced to change the glottal stop in her daughter's name to a hyphen because the government could only use the Roman alphabet... [more]
Sahalia f Arabic
Means "lizard" in Arabic.
Šähärbikä f Bashkir
From Persian شهر (shahr) meaning "city" and feminine name element бикә (bikä).
Sahibə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani feminine form of Sahib.
Sahila f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek sahil meaning "light".
Sahira f Muslim (Rare)
Feminine form of Sahir, meaning "wakeful". Also used to mean "moon, moonlight" or "plain (as in a land without mountains or trees)".
Sahiyena f Sioux
Means “red speakers,” “people of a different talk,” or “speaks unintelligibly” in Dakota. The name Cheyenne is derived from Sahiyena
Şahnisa f Ottoman Turkish, Turkish (Rare)
Means "the ruler of women", from Persian شاه (shah) meaning "shah, king" and Arabic نساء (nisa) meaning "women".
Şahnisə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Şahnisa.
Şahriza f Karachay-Balkar
Karachay-Balkar form of Shahrazad.
Sahsinaimska f & m Siksika
Means "sarcee medicine pipe" in Siksika.
Saia m Tongan
Short form of Sosaia.
Saïda f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Form of Sa'ida used in Northern Africa and other French-influenced regions of the continent.
Saidra f Germanic, Medieval French, Medieval
A hypocoristic deriving from Proto-Germanic sadaz "full, sated", related to Latin satis "sufficiently, adequately".
Saidtilla m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek said meaning "fortunate" and tilla meaning "gold" or "dear, precious".
Saidto'ra m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek said meaning "fortunate" and to'ra meaning "lord".
Saieva f Medieval English
Medieval form of Sægiefu.
Saika f Japanese
From 彩 (sai) meaning "colorful, vibrant" or 菜 (sai) meaning "vegetables, greens" combined with 霞 (ka) meaning "cloud, mist". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Saikhantuyaa f Mongolian
Derived from сайхан (saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome" and туяа (tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)".
Saikhanzaya f Mongolian
Derived from Mongolian сайхан (saikhan) meaning "nice, good, beautiful" and заяа (zayaa) meaning "future, fate, fortune".
Saila f Finnish
Meaning uncertain. Possibly inspired by names such as Aila, Laila 2 and Saima 2.
Saimira f Albanian
Variant of Saemira.
Saintuyaa f Mongolian
From Mongolian сайн (sain) meaning "good" and туяа (tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)".
Sainzayaa f & m Mongolian
From Mongolian сайн (sain) meaning "good" and заяа (zayaa) meaning "future, fortune, fate".
Saioa f Basque
From Saioa, the name of a mountain located in Navarre, Spain.
Saionara f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Probably from the Japanese phrase sayonara meaning "goodbye; farewell". It is not used as a given name in Japan.
Saira f Romansh
Surselvan Romansh form of Sara. The name coincides with Romansh saira "evening".
Saisha f Indian
While many baby name sites and books list this name as meaning 'meaningful life' or 'god', these are incorrect. These meanings likely originate from the misconception that Saisha (or saiṣā) is another name for the goddess Lakshmi, from the following line in a stotra by Ramanuja: saiṣā devī sakala-bhuvana-prārthanā-kāmadhenuḥ... [more]
Saita m Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (sai) meaning "blossom" combined with 多 (ta) meaning "many, much". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Saiva f Latvian
Of uncertain origin and meaning. A connection to Latvian saiva "bobbin" has been suggested.
Sajida f Arabic, Urdu
Feminine form of Sajid.
Šájinka f Czech
Diminutive of Šarlota.
Sajiya f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek saj meaning "rhyming couplets".
Sajmira f Albanian
Feminine form of Sajmir.
Sakalia m Tongan
Tongan equivalent of Zachary.
Sakariya m Thai (Muslim)
Thai form of Zakariyya (see Zechariah).
Sakiha f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (saki) meaning "blossom" combined with 葉 (ha) meaning "leaf, needle, blade". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sakihisa m Japanese (Rare)
From 前 (saki, mae) meaning "before, ago, previously, former, earlier", combined with 久 (ku, hisa) meaning "long time, long-lasting, ancient, remaining unchanged".
Sakika f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (saki) meaning "blossom" combined with 花 (ka) or 華 (ka) which both mean "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Säkinä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Sakina.
Sakina f Japanese
From Japanese 咲 (saki) meaning "blossom" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Şakirä f Tatar
Tatar form of Shakira.
Šäkirä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Shakira.
Šakira f Bosnian (Rare)
Bosnian form of Shakira.
Sakira f Japanese
From Japanese 桜 (sa) meaning "cherry blossom" combined with 輝 (kira) meaning "brightness; lustre; brilliance; radiance; splendor". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Sakiusa m Fijian
Fijian form of Zacchaeus.
Salacija f Bosnian
Bosnian form of Salacia.
Saladina f Galician
Feminine form of Saladino.
Salainganba m Manipuri
Means "family pride" in Meitei.
Salamasina f Samoan
Name of a queen of Samoa. The name is held with respect there and is only meant for the royal family. It means "forever".
Salcia f Polish
Diminutive form of Salomea.
Saleigha f Hebrew (Rare)
Means “ Beautiful one” in Hebrew
Salesia f German (Rare)
Probably a feminisation of the surname Sales borne by the Roman Catholic saint Francis de Sales.
Salika f Mari
Means "lovely, righteous" in Mari.
Sälimä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Salima.
Səlimə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Salima.
Salimata f Western African
Form of Salima used in parts of western Africa.
Salimto'ra m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek salim meaning "healthy" and to'ra meaning "lord".
Salimxo'ja m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek salim meaning "healthy" and xo'ja meaning "master".
Salína f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Salina.
Salina f Bengali, Malay
Meaning uncertain, possibly of Arabic origin.
Salinguerra m Medieval Italian
Meaning uncertain. The second element is likely derived from Italian guerra meaning "war".
Salipada m Maguindanao
Derived from Sanskrit श्रीपाद (śrī́pā́da) meaning "holy foot", from श्री (śrī́) "sacred, holy" and पाद (pā́da) "foot". A notable bearer was Salipada (or Saripada) Pendatun (1912-1985), a Filipino Muslim statesman and military officer.
Salisa f Thai
Means "embrace, hug, caress" in Thai.
Sallina f English (Rare), Malaysian
Probably a variant of Selina.
Sallustia f Ancient Roman
Feminine form of Sallustius. A well-known bearer of this name was Sallustia Orbiana, who had briefly been the wife of Roman Emperor Alexander Severus.
Salmakia f Literature
Salmakia is a character in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials book series, first released in 1995.
Salomina f English (Rare), Dutch (Archaic), Popular Culture
Variant of Salome. This was used for a character in the movie 'I Origins' in 2014.
Salonia f Ancient Roman
Salonia Matidia was the daughter and only child of Ulpia Marciana and wealthy praetor Gaius Salonius Matidius Patruinus. Her maternal uncle was the Roman emperor Trajan. Trajan had no children and treated her like his daughter... [more]
Salsabiela f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Salsabil.
Salsabilla f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Salsabil.
Salshabila f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Salsabil.
Salshabilla f Indonesian
Indonesian variant of Salsabil.
Salustia f Spanish, Polish
Spanish and Polish form of Sallustia.
Salustiana f Galician
Feminine form of Salustiano.
Salutia f Early Jewish, Late Roman (Rare)
female form of Salutius found in the Jewish catacombs of Rome... [more]
Salvatorica f Sardinian
Feminine form of Salvatore primarily used in Sardinia.
Salvatorina f Italian
Feminine diminutive of Salvatore.
Salvia f Medieval French, English (Rare), Spanish (Rare), Galician (Rare), Italian (Rare)
From the genus name of sage, an herb formerly used as medicine, which comes from Latin salvus "healthy, safe" (related to salvere "to save, to be saved"), referring to the plant's supposed healing properties... [more]
Salviana f Spanish
Feminine form of Salviano
Salvina f Italian (Rare)
From the Latin salvus, meaning "salvation" (as in 'of the soul').
Salvita m Spanish
Diminutive of Salvador.
Salwia f Polish
Polish form of Salvia.
Samaiya f African American (Modern, Rare), American (Modern, Rare)
Modern name, possibly based on the sounds found in other names such as Amiyah and Shamya.
Samaria f Various, English (Modern), African American (Modern), Spanish (Mexican, Modern, Rare)
From the New Testament place name Samaria, which ultimately comes from the Hebrew verb שָׁמַר (shamar) meaning "to guard, to keep"... [more]
Samaritana f Medieval Latin
From Latin Samaritana meaning "Samaritan, woman from Samaria".
Samenitā f Tongan
Tongan equivalent of Samantha.
Samia f Medieval English
Possibly a feminine form of Samson.
Samidha f Indian
the holy sticks put in the yagnas in hindus
Sämiğulla m Tatar
Tatar version of Arabic Samiullah (سمیع اللہ), which means ”Listening to Allah”.
Samiha f Arabic, Bengali
Feminine form of Samih.
Samika f Hindi
Possibly a Form of Samiksha.
Samila f Hebrew
Hebrew origin meaning "requested of God"... [more]
Samima f Urdu
Means "true, sincere, genuine" in Urdu.
Samiqa f Arabic (Mashriqi)
Feminine form of Samiq.
Sämirä f Bashkir
Bashkir form of Samira 1.
Samirə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Samira 1.
Samita f Indian
Means "assembled; collected" in Sanskrit.
Sampaguita f Filipino
From Tagalog sampagita meaning "jasmine flower", which may have been derived from the Tagalog phrase sumpa kita meaning "I promise you" or from Spanish champaquita, a diminutive of champaca meaning "champak flower".
Samprina f Greek
Greek form of Sabrina.
Samrina f Arabic
Means "fruit".
Šämsiä f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمْسِيَّة (šamsiyya) meaning "parasol".
Šämsibikä f Bashkir
From Arabic شَمس (shams) meaning "sun" and feminine name element бикә (bikä).
Şəmsiyyə f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Shamsiyya.
Samuila f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Samuil.
Samularia f Hebrew (Rare)
Means "sweet one forever" in Hebrew.
Samulina f Judeo-Anglo-Norman, Faroese
Judeo-Anglo-Norman feminine form of Samuel and Faroese form of Samuline.
Sanchitha f Tamil, Kannada
Southern Indian form of Sanchita.
Sancia f Medieval Spanish, Judeo-Catalan, Gascon
(Medieval) Spanish, Judeo-Catalan and Gascon form of Sanctia.
Sanctia f Late Roman
Feminine form of Sanctius.
Sandalia f Spanish
Feminine form of Sandalio.
Sandhiya f Indian, Tamil, Kannada
Variant of Sandhya used in southern India.
Sandija f Latvian
Feminine form of Sandis.
Sandipta f Hinduism
Origin- India... [more]
Sandraudiga f Germanic Mythology
Sandraudiga is a Germanic goddess, attested on a stone with a Latin inscription, found in North Brabant, the Netherlands. The origin and meaning of her name are debated: theories include a derivation form Germanic *sanþ "true, real" and Gothic audags "rich; fortunate" and Old English *sand "sand" and Gothic rauds "red".
Sandria f English (American, Rare)
Either an elaboration of Sandra or a variant of Xandria/Zandria
Sangita f Indian, Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Kannada, Odia, Assamese, Nepali
From Sanskrit सङ्गीत (saṅgīta) meaning "music" or संगीत (saṃgīta) meaning "sung together, sung in harmony".
Sania f Arabic (Gallicized), Pakistani
Variant transliteration of Saniyya.
Sania f & m Russian
Variant transcription of Sanya 2.
Saniata f Ilocano
Means "jewel, precious stone, gem" in Ilocano.
Sanija f Indian (Modern)
Derived from Sanskrit sani "gift" and ja "born".
Sanita f Latvian
Originally a diminutive of Sane and Zane 2, now used as a given name in its own right.
Sanita m Tongan
Short form of Alekisanita.
Sanitula f Tongan
Variant of Senitula.
Saniya f Kazakh, Tatar, Kyrgyz, Urdu
Either derived from Arabic ثَانِي (ṯānī) meaning "second (child)" or a variant of Saniyya.
Saniyə f Azerbaijani (Rare)
Azerbaijani form of Saniye.
Sanjida f Bengali
Derived from Persian سنجیده‎ (sanjideh) meaning "weighed, considered, evaluated".
Sanjina f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Sanjin.
Sanodia f Urdu
Sanodia means "Queen of Heaven" & "Blessing of Allah".Its an urdu arabic name which is unique in its pronunciation.it was used in ancient time & having very old history in muslims women.now it is very rarly using name in current erra.but it is intresting name as everyone like it.
Sanseverina f Obscure
Possibly a feminine form of the Italian surname Sanseverino, referring to Saint Severinus.
Santasia f English (American, Modern, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Santa.
Santía f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Santia.
Santia f Italian, English
Diminutive of Santina.
Santiaga f Spanish
Feminine form of Santiago.
Santilla f Neapolitan
Diminutive of Santa 1.
Santita f African American, American (Hispanic, Rare)
Santita Jackson is an American singer and political commentator. Her father is civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson.
Santuccia f Medieval Italian
Medieval Italian diminutive of Santa 1, as -uccia is an Italian feminine diminutive suffix.... [more]
Santzia f Medieval Basque
Basque form of Sancha.
Sanzhima f Buryat
Means "clean, honest" in Buryat, from Tibetan གཙང་མ (gtsang ma) "clean".
Sânziana f Romanian, Romanian Mythology, Theatre
Sânziana, also known as Iana Sânziana, is a fairy in Romanian mythology. Her name is a contraction of Romanian sfânt "holy" and zână "fairy" - but, according to Mircea Eliade, ultimately also influenced by the Latin phrase Sancta Diana "Holy Diana"... [more]
Sapheria f English
Elaboration of Sapphira.
Saphia f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Variant transliteration of صفية (see Safiyyah). Saphia Azzeddine (*1979) is a French naturalized Moroccan writer, actress, and screenwriter.
Saphira f English, Judeo-Anglo-Norman, Literature, Various
English variant and Judeo-Anglo-Norman form of Sapphira. This is the name of Eragon's dragon in Christopher Paolini's 'Inheritance Cycle' series of books.
Saphiria f American (Rare)
Extremely rare elaborated form of Sapphira.
Sapia f Filipino, Maguindanao, Maranao, Indonesian
Maguindanao, Maranao and Indonesian form of Safiyyah.
Sapientia f Late Roman (?), Medieval Latin
Means "wisdom" in Latin, a literal translation of the Greek name Sophia. This was borne by the Blessed Sapientia, a prioress of the Cistercian nunnery of Mont Cornillon near Liège, present-day Belgium, who brought up Saint Juliana (ca... [more]
Sapienza f Medieval Italian
Directly taken from Italian sapienza "wisdom; knowledge" (compare English and Medieval Flemish Sapience).
Sapîna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Sabina.
Saqiba f Arabic
Feminine form of Saqib.
Sarafina f Swahili
Apparently means "bright star" in Swahili. The name might be best known from the South African musical "Sarafina!" Also, the name is often easily confused with the Hebrew name Seraphina, but despite looking similar in appearance, both names clearly have completely different etymologies.
Sarafina f Sicilian
Sicilian variant of Serafina.
Saralinda f English
A combination of Sara and Linda.
Sarcia f Polish
Polish diminutive of Sara.
Sargia f Arthurian Cycle
A sorceress who gave her son Felice to Tristan the Younger as a squire.
Sarıada f Yakut
From сарыал (sarıal) meaning "radiance, halo, shining".
Sariaha f African, English (African)
Name introduced in the early 2010s.
Sariaka m & f Malagasy
Means "charming, affable" in Malagasy.
Saribola m Uzbek
Derived from the Uzbek sari meaning "yellow" or "best" and bola meaning "child, boy".