Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the length is 5.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Dolce f Judeo-Italian
Derived from Italian dolce "sweet" (compare Dulcie).
Dolev m & f Hebrew
Means "plane tree" in Hebrew.
Dolfa f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adolfa.
Dolfi m & f Czech (Rare), German
For men, this name is a diminutive of Dolf. For women, it is a diminutive of feminine names that contain -dolf- and -dolph-, such as Adolphine and Rudolfina.... [more]
Dolli f Hungarian
Hungarian borrowing of Dolly.
Dolma f Tibetan, Bhutanese
Means "mother of liberation" or "goddess of liberation", from Tibetan སྒྲོལ (sgrol) meaning "liberate, free, release" and མ (ma) meaning "mother, goddess" (metaphorically referring to enlightenment)... [more]
Dolon m & f Bengali
The name Dolon is used in various places on this planet, I have seen the greek meaning of this name. But in the whole world, this meaning is not valid for this name. Especially in India and in Indian-Subcontinent the name Dolon has a tradition and tribute... [more]
Dolya f Bulgarian, Slavic Mythology
Goddess of fate in East Slavic Mythology, personification of the fate bestowed upon a man at birth. She is described as a plainly dressed woman able to turn herself into various shapes. When she is positive she is named Dolya, when negative she turns into Nedolya.
Dolza f Medieval Jewish, Jewish (Archaic), Gascon, Judeo-Provençal
Variant of Dolça. It was recorded in what is modern-day Germany from the 12th century onwards.
Dolze f Medieval Jewish
Variant of Dolza. It was recorded in what is present-day Germany from the 12th century onwards.
Doman f Kurdish
Possibly from the Kurdish dom meaning "persistence, perseverance".
Dombi f Sanskrit
MEANING - a kind of drama... [more]
Domka f Croatian, Slovene
Either from the noun dom meaning ‘'home'’ or a short form of Dominika.
Döndi f Turkmen
Means "returned" in Turkmen
Dondi m & f Popular Culture, English
From a comic strip first published in 1955. In this comicstrip, Dondi was an Italian orphan asking for his parents saying "dondi" all the time. In the comic strip this comes from people calling him dandy boy.
Döndü f Turkish
Directly taken from Turkish döndü meaning "returned".
Donea f English (American, Rare)
Meaning unknown. Possibly a form of Danae, or diminutive of Idonea, or a feminized version of Don or a variation or feminized version of any name beginning with Don.
Donia f American (South, Archaic)
Short form of names ending in -donia, such as Aldonia, Fredonia, and Caledonia.
Donia f Arabic (Egyptian)
Egyptian Arabic form of Dunya.
Donie f American
Variant of Donnie or a diminutive of Donna.
Döníz f Hungarian
Hungarian phonetic rendering of French Denise.
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]
Donja f Esperanto
Spelling variant of Donya.
Dónka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Aldona via Aldónka and Donata.
Donni f & m English (Rare)
Variation of Donnie
Dön’ya f Tatar
Tatar form of Dunya.
Donya f Russian (Rare)
Diminutive of Avdotya and Yevdokiya. Also compare Dunya.
Donya f Persian
Means "world".
Doona f Manx
Derived from Manx doo "black; black-haired, black headed".
Doora f Estonian (Rare)
Estonian form of Dora.
Doray f Filipino
Diminutive of Dolores, Isadora and Teodora.
Dordi f Norwegian, Swedish (Rare)
Diminutive of Dorede, which was a variant of Dorete, the Old Swedish form of Dorothea. It has been used in Sweden since at least the 16th century.
Dorel m & f Hebrew (Modern)
Combination of the names Dor and El means "God's Generation" in Hebrew.
Dorie m & f Scots
Short form of both Theodore and Theodora.
Dorin f Hebrew (Modern)
Popular girls name in Israel, it is came from the name Doron
Dorja f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene short form of Doroteja.
Dorje m & f Tibetan
Alternate transcription of Dorji. This is the Tibetan name for the vajra, a Buddhist ritual weapon.
Dorkȧ f Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Dorothy.
Dorla f English (Modern)
A combination of Dora and Darla.
Dorle f German
Diminutive of Dorothea.
Dorli f German (Swiss)
Diminutive of Dora and Dorothea.
Dorra f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Dorra Ibrahim Zarrouk (born January 13, 1980) is a Tunisian actress living in Egypt.
Dorry f English
Variant of Dory.
Dorta f Swedish (Archaic)
Contracted form of Doreta (see also Dorthe and Dörthe).
Dörte f Low German (Rare), East Frisian
Low German and East Frisian short form of Dorothea.
Dorys f English
Variant of Doris.
Dosie f English
Diminutive of Dorothy or Theodosia.
Dotan m & f Hebrew (Rare)
The Bible tells us that Joseph found his brothers in a place named Dotan, which is possibly means "pit" or "hole" in Hebrew.
Dotir f Old Danish
Old Danish form of Dóttir.
Dotis m & f Greek Mythology
Dotis (male), son of Asterius and Amphictyone (herself daughter of Phthius)... [more]
Dotsi f English
Variant of Dotsie.
Dotsy f English
Variant of Dotsie.
Dótta f Old Danish
Possibly an Old Danish form of Dóttir. The name appears in the epic work 'Heimskringla' written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson.
Douae f Arabic
A variant of Doua.
Douce f French (Rare), French (Belgian, Rare), Judeo-French
Derived from French douce, the feminine form of the adjective doux "sweet; soft; mild, gentle" (ultimately from Latin dulcis "sweet" via Old French dous "soft; tender"), this name is a cognate of Dulcie.
Doula f Greek (Rare)
Perhaps originally a short form of Spyridoula, Theodoula or another name ending in doula. This was borne by Doula Mouriki (1934-1991), a Greek art historian and Byzantinologist.
Douze f Judeo-French
Variant of Douce.
Dovie f American (South)
Diminutive of Deborah, or sometimes simply from the English word dove. (See also Dove.)
Dowse f Medieval English
Medieval form of Dulcie. (See Duce.)
Drane f Albanian
Originally a short form of Drandofile and Dranafile, used as a given name in its own right.
Dráža f Czech
Diminutive of Drahoslava.
Drema f English
Either a variant of Dreama, or from the Slavic surname derived from Proto-Slavic *drěmati "to sleep, nap, doze".
Drena f Croatian
Feminine form of Dren.
Dreya f English (Rare)
Short form of Andrea 2.
Drica f Portuguese, Galician
Hypocoristic of Adriana.
Drífa f Old Norse, Icelandic, Norse Mythology
Old Norse name meaning "fall of snow, snowdrift". In Norse mythology, Drífa was a daughter of king Snær. She had two sisters, Mjǫll and Fǫnn and one brother, Þorri.
Drina f Albanian
Feminine form of Drin.
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.
Drite f Albanian
Derived from Albanian dritë "light".
Driva f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish form of Drífa.
Dröfn f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Drǫfn.
Drǫfn f Norse Mythology
Means "wave, billow" in Old Norse. In Norse mythology, Drǫfn was the daughter of Ægir and Rán. She was sometimes referred to as Bára, also meaning "wave, billow".
Drora f Hebrew
Feminine form of Dror.
Droso f Greek (Rare, ?)
From the Greek word δρόσος (drosos) meaning "dew". This is a rather uncommon name, mostly heard in rural areas.
Drótt f Icelandic (Rare), Old Norse
Possibly from Old Norse drótt which meant "household, a people" and "the host of the king's men, body-guard of a king".
Druda f Judeo-Catalan (Rare, Archaic), Medieval Jewish
Of uncertain origin and meaning. One theory, however, suggests a coinage as a feminine form of the Catalan masculine name Trud.
Dubhe f Astronomy
Derived from Arabic دُبّ (dubb) meaning "bear", taken from the phrase ظهر الدب الاكبر (ẓahr ad-dubb al-ʾakbar) meaning "the back of the greater bear". This is one of the traditional names for the star Alpha Ursae Majoris, in the constellation Ursa Major.
Dubra f Galician
Transferred use of the name of the river Dubra in the province of A Coruña in Galicia, whose name is speculated to be derived from Celtic dubra, the plural of dubron "water".
Dudie f Albanian
Variant of Dudi.
Duean f Thai
Means "moon, month" in Thai.
Duela f Popular Culture
Duela Dent is the Joker's daughter in DC comics.
Duena f Jewish, Judeo-Spanish
Means "lady, mistress" in Judeo-Spanish, ultimately from Latin domina "mistress".
Duğum f Karachay-Balkar
Means "currant" in Karachay-Balkar.
Duiri f Sami
Sami form of Tuire.
Dulia f Asturian, Galician
Short form of Odulia.
Dulie f & m English (?)
No known origin nor meaning. a person with this given name was Dulie Delic an athlete for the Geelong SC.
Dulma f Buryat
Buryat form of Dolma.
Dulza f Aragonese (Archaic)
Aragonese form of Dulce.
Dunai f Chinese
From the Chinese 惇 (dūn) meaning "be kind, cordial, sincere" and 霭 (ǎi) meaning "cloudy sky, haze, calm".
Dunea f Moldovan (Rare)
Moldovan form of Dunya.
Dunia f Arabic, Spanish, Galician
Derived from Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā) "world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)".
Dünya f Turkish, Azerbaijani
Turkish form of Dunia.
Dünyä f Turkmen
Turkmen form of Dunya.
Dunya f Arabic
Derived from Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā) "world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)".
Dunyo f Tajik, Uzbek
Tajik and Uzbek form of Dunya.
Duojá f Sami
Meaning unknown.
Duong m & f Vietnamese (Anglicized)
Variant of Dương used outside of Vietnam.
Duová f Sami
Sami form of Tove and Tuovi.
Duoyi f Chinese
From the Chinese 朵 (duǒ) meaning "cluster of flowers" and 熠 (yì) meaning "bright and sparkling".
Durar f Arabic
Means "pearls" in Arabic.
Dürli f Turkmen (Rare)
Means "different, various" in Turkmen.
Durna f Azerbaijani
Derived from Azerbaijani durna "crane (bird)", ultimately from Proto-Turkic *durunja. The crane is sometimes seen as a symbol of peace.
Dusca f Medieval Czech
Of unknown meaning. The -ca ending indicates that this may be a Slavic diminutive of some unidentified name.
Duška f Croatian, Serbian, Slovene
Feminine form of Duško.
Düşle f Turkish
Means "imagine" in Turkish.
Dusti f & m English (Modern)
Variant of Dusty.
Dusya f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Yevdokiya.
Duyên f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 緣 (duyên) meaning "grace, charm" or "fate".
Duyğu f Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani form of Duygu
Düynö f Kyrgyz
Kyrgyz form of Dunya.
Dwura f Assyrian
Assyrian form of Deborah. It also means "bee" in Assyrian.
Dyana f English
Variant of Diana.
Dyani f American (Modern)
Many baby name books and sites claim this name means "deer" in 'Native American', with some claiming it's Cherokee. No evidence can be found supporting this claim however and it's more likely the name is a variant of Diane or is an invented name.
Dycha f Yiddish
This is a Yiddish version of the name Judith.
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.
Dyrim f Literature
Dyrim is the fourth of the seven bells used by necromancers and the Abhorsen in Garth Nix's Old Kingdom trilogy. Dyrim is the Speaker, the bell that grants or removes the power of speech to the listener.
Dysia f Polish
Diminutive of Edyta.
Dysis f Greek Mythology
Means "sunset" in Greek. She was the eleventh of the twelve Horae, goddesses of the hours, who presided over the hour of sunset.
Dytka f Polish
Diminutive of Judyta via Judytka.
Dyuti f Bengali
"Brightness, Light, Glow, Dignity" Jyoti
Dyzia f Polish
Diminutive of Dioniza.
Dzahn f Sanskrit
Feminine Form of the name John
Dzīle f Latvian (Rare)
Directly taken from Latvian dzīle "depth".
Dżina f Kashubian
Diminutive of Redżina.
Dzina f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Dinah.
Dživa f Croatian (Rare)
Feminine form of Dživo.
Dziva f Shona
Means "water" in Shona.
Dzovo f Armenian
Diminutive form of Dzovik.
Dzuwa m & f Chewa
Means "sunshine" in Chewa.
Dzvik f Armenian
Armenian feminine name meaning "little egg".
Eabha f Irish
Variant of Éabha.
Eadaz f Literature
Eadaz is the name of one of the main characters in Samantha Shannon's book "The Priory of the Orange Tree".... [more]
Eadda f American (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from the Old English element ead meaning "rich, blessed".
Eaddy f English (American, Rare, ?)
Variant of Edie, influenced by the surname Eaddy. Compare Eadie.
Eaden m & f English (Rare)
Variant of Eden.
Eadie f English
Variant of Edie.
Eadka f English (American)
Possibly an elaboration or diminutive of Eada.
Eaint f Burmese
From Burmese အိမ့် (ein) meaning "rock or roll gently".
Ealee f Manx
Variant of Ealish.
Ealga f Irish (Rare)
Means "noble, brave", taken from the Irish Inis Ealga "Noble Isle", which was a poetic name for Ireland.
Eanna f English (Modern, Rare), English (American, Modern, Rare)
Possibly a female variant of Ean or a variant of Ianna. Eanna was given to 6 girls in 2014 according to the Social Security Administration.
Earla f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Earl
Earth f & m English (Rare), English (Puritan)
From the English word earth, referring to the planet, the soil, or the alchemical element. Ultimately from Old English eorthe.
Earyn f English (American)
Alternate spelling of Erin.
Easie f Scots
Short form of Easabell.
Eaves f & m English
Transferred use of the surname Eaves.
Ebbat f Cornish
Cornish diminutive of Elizabeth.
Ebbye f English
Variant spelling of Ebbie.
Ebele f East Frisian
Variation of Ebel
Ebeny f English
Variant of Ebony.
Ebing f Chinese
From the Chinese 娥 (é) meaning "be beautiful, good" and 冰 (bīng) meaning "ice".
Ebiye m & f Ijaw
Means "a good thing" in Ijaw.
Ebrel f Cornish (Modern, Rare)
Derived from Cornish Ebrel "(month of) April". This is a recent coinage.
Ecija f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene female form of Ezio. Notable bearer is Croatian actress Ecija Ojdanić (born 1974).
Edaka f Sanskrit
Name - Edaka एडका ... [more]
Edcel m & f Filipino
Combination of Eduardo and Celeste.
Edden m & f English (American, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Edden.... [more]
Edebe f African
The name originates from Sudan, in the concrete tribe of Gurfan meaning the first, princess.
Edela f East Frisian (Archaic), Old Danish, Old Swedish, Portuguese (Brazilian)
Short form of names containing the East Frisian name element ethel-, a cognate of Old High German adal-.
Edena f American (Rare)
Feminine variant of Eden.
Edera f Italian, Albanian (Rare), Romanian (Rare), Maltese (Rare)
Means "ivy" in Italian, from Latin hedera "ivy", perhaps related to the Latin root -hendere "to grasp; to take; to cling onto".
Edica f Slovene
Diminutive of Eda.
Edika f Slovene
Diminutive of Eda.
Edina f Bosnian, Slovene, Albanian, Kosovar
Feminine form of Edin.
Edina f Manx
Feminine form of Edin and cognate of Edeeney.
Ediva f Medieval English
Medieval form of the Old English name Eadgifu.
Ediye f Crimean Tatar
Crimean Tatar form of Hadia, though it could also be derived from Arabic هَدِيَّة (hadiyya) meaning "gift, donation".
Ediyn f Ancient Hebrew
Hebrew variant of Eden
Edmar m & f Portuguese (Brazilian), Spanish (Latin American), Filipino
Combination of the elements ed (from Eduardo, Edgardo, etc.) and mar (cf. Neymar, Diomar).
Edmea f Italian, Maltese
Italian cognate of Edmée.
Edona f Albanian
Feminine form of Edon.
Edora f English
Variant of Eudora.
Edrie f English
Possibly a diminutive of Edris.
Edris f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Edric. This was the birth name of Anglo-Irish ballet dancer Ninette de Valois (1898-2001).
Edsyl f & m Filipino
Variant of Edsel. This name has only been used 5 times.
Eduša f Czech (Rare), Slovak (Rare)
Czech and Slovak diminutive of Edita and Eduarda. Also compare Eduška.
Edusa f Roman Mythology
A goddess who enables the taking of nourishment. The variations of her name may indicate that while her functional focus was narrow, her name had not stabilized; she was mainly a divine force to be invoked ad hoc for a specific purpose... [more]
Edyth f English (Rare)
Variant of Edith, in use in the English-speaking world since the 1200s.
Edzia f Polish
Diminutive of Edyta.
Eedit f Finnish, Estonian (Rare)
Estonian variant and Finnish form of Edith.
Eedla f Finnish
Finnish variant of Edla, rarer than the original form.
Eefke f & m Dutch (Rare)
Diminutive of Eef. A known bearer of this name is the Dutch field hockey player Eefke Mulder (b. 1977).
Éehē'e f Cheyenne
Means "Camps All Over Woman" from the Cheyenne -eehe meaning "move camp".
Eekku f Finnish
Finish diminutive of Eerika.
Eelan f Scots
Scots form of Helen and Ellen 1.
Eeʹled f Sami (Skolt)
Skolt Sami form of Elina.
Eelie f Scots
Diminutive of Eelan.
Eelke m & f West Frisian
West Frisian diminutive form of Ele via Eele in the case of male bearers, and feminine form of Ele in the case of female bearers.
Eenie f Scots
Short form of names ending in -ina.
Eesie f Scots
Diminutive of Easabell.
Eeske f North Frisian
Variant of Eska.
Effia f Akan, Literature
Meaning, “girl born on Friday.”
Effia f Finnish (Rare, Archaic)
Possibly a Finnish variant of Euphemia. Effia was particularly popular in the Central Finland in the mid to late 1800's.
Effye f English
Variant of Effie.
Efnan f Turkish
Tree branches
Efsun f Turkish
Turkish name that means ''Magic, Spell, Enchantment''.
Efuru f Igbo
Means "daughter of heaven" in Igbo.
Egija f Latvian
Of uncertain origin and meaning, although a derivation from masculine Aegidius has been suggested.
Egita f Latvian
Variant of Egija.
Eglah f Biblical
Means "heifer, female calf" in Hebrew. In the Old Testament Eglah is one of King David's wives and the mother of Ithream (2 Samuel 3:4).
Egres f Hungarian (Rare)
Means "gooseberry" in Hungarian.
Ehala f Estonian (Rare)
Elaboration of Eha.
Ehana f Japanese
From Japanese 愛 (e) meaning "love, affection" combined with 花 (hana) meaning "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Ehani f Nepali
Meaning "song".
Eiden m & f Spanish (Modern)
Spanish form of Aiden, reflecting the English pronunciation.
Eidno f Sami
Sami form of Eino.
Eigra f Welsh (Rare)
Probably a variant of Eigr. This is borne by the Welsh writer Eigra Lewis Roberts (1939-).
Eikyo m & f Japanese
Means ‘Influence’ in Japanese. Detective Conan episode 875, Eikyo is the name of the priest.
Eilat f Hebrew
Name of a city in Israel.... [more]
Eilen f Norwegian, Faroese
Norwegian and Faroese variant of Eileen or Elin.
Eiley f Scots
Variant of Eily.
Eilin f Norwegian, Faroese
Norwegian and Faroese variant of Elin as well as a Norwegian and Faroese adoption of Eileen.
Eilir f & m Welsh
Derived from Welsh eilir "butterfly; regneration; spring".
Éilís f Irish
Irish form of Elizabeth.
Eilke m & f East Frisian, West Frisian, Low German
For a man, it is the diminutive form of Eile - but for a woman, it is the feminine form of Eile.
Eilov m & f Norwegian (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Eilev, as well as an archaic feminine form.
Eilyn f English (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a variant of Eileen, using the popular name suffix lyn.
Einat f Hebrew
Means "spring of water" in Hebrew.
Einav m & f Hebrew
Variant transcription of Enav.
Einés f Galician (Rare)
Galician form of Agnes.
Éinín f Irish
Directly taken from the Irish word éinín meaning "little bird". This is a modern Irish word name that has only been used in recent years.
Èinsa f Emilian-Romagnol
Emilian form of Enza. The name coincides with the name of the river Èinsa.
Eione f Greek Mythology
Eione was one of the Nereids; fifty sea-nymphe daughters of Nereus. Eione was a Nereis of the "beach strand." Eione is from the Ancient Greek Ἠιόνη meaning 'the shore goddess'
Eiram f Urdu
Variation of the Arabic Iram, meaning “garden in Heaven”
Eiria f English
Possibly a transferred use of the surname Eiria.... [more]
Eiril f Norwegian
Modern name invented in the 20th century composed of Old Norse ei "ever, always" (possibly taken from Eirik) and hildr "battle".
Eirin f Japanese
From Japanese 永 (ei) "eternal" and 琳 (rin) "jewel."