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.
Urwen f Literature
The name means "Fire Maiden", it comes from the Sindarin words ur "fire" and -wen "maiden". ... [more]
Usako f Japanese
from usa mean rabbit and ko meaning child its first possible usage is in "Sailor Moon"
Useni m & f Yao
Means "tell me" in Yao.
Ushio f & m Japanese
From the Japanese meaning "tide", "salt water" or "opportunity".
Ushma f Indian
means heat
Usorọ m & f Ibibio, Efik
Means "festival" in Ibibio and Efik.
Ust'jä f Veps
Veps form of Justina.
Utaba f Japanese
From Japanese 唄 (uta) meaning "song, ballad", or 詩 (uta) meaning "poetry, poem" and 羽 (ba) meaning "feathers". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Utaha f Japanese (Rare)
From Japanese 歌 (uta) meaning "song" combined with 羽 (ha) meaning "feathers". Other kanji combinations can also form this name.
Utaka f Japanese
From Japanese 歌 (uta) meaning "song, poetry" or 詩 (uta) meaning "poetry, poem" combined with 佳 (ka) meaning "good, beautiful", 香 (ka) meaning "fragrance", 可 (ka) meaning "passable", 歌 (ka) meaning "song, poetry" or 花 (ka) or 華 (ka) which both mean "flower"... [more]
Utako f Japanese
From Japanese 歌 (uta) "song" and 子 (ko) "child".
Utami f Indonesian
Derived from Indonesian utama meaning "best, main, principal", ultimately from Sanskrit उत्तम (uttama).
Utano f Japanese
From Japanese 唄 (uta) meaning "song, ballad", 歌 (uta) meaning "song, sing", 雅 (u) meaning "gracious, elegant, graceful, refined", 詩 (uta) meaning "poem, poetry" or 唱 (uta) meaning "chant, recite, call upon, yell", 楽 (ta) meaning "music, comfort, ease" combined with 乃 (no), a possessive particle, 野 (no) meaning "plains, field, rustic, civilian life" or 能 (no) meaning "ability, talent, skill, capacity"... [more]
Utari f Japanese
From Japanese 詩 (uta) meaning "poem" combined with 里 (ri) meaning "village". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Utawa f Japanese
From Japanese 詩 (uta) meaning "poetry, poem" combined with 和 (wa) meaning "peace, harmony". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Utayo f & m Japanese
From Japanese 羽 (u) meaning "feather", 太 (ta) meaning "thick, big" combined with 代 (yo) meaning "generation". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Utena f Japanese
The Protagonist of the Anime Revolutionary Girl Utena. It has been said to mean 'calyx'
Uthai m & f Thai
Means "sunrise, dawn" in Thai.
Uður m & f Turkish
luck,talisman,fortune
Utina f Indigenous American
Means "woman of my country"
Uudoi f Veps
Veps form of Eudocia.
Uyara f Tupi, Brazilian
Variant of Uiara.
Uygar m & f Turkish
Means "civilised" in Turkish.
Uysal f Turkish
Means "submissive" in Turkish.
Uyto'l f Uzbek
Derived from Uzbek uy meaning "household, home" and to'l meaning "born late".
Uzima f & m Swahili
Life
Uzuki m & f Japanese (Rare)
Variant transcription of Udzuki.
Uzuru m & f Shona
Meaning “a higher place; sky; paradise; heaven”.
Vabna f Bengali
Meaning "Imagination".
Vagia f Greek
Variant of Vaia.
Vagna f Faroese, Icelandic
Feminine form of Vagn.
Vahuo m & f Yi
Means "raised in the mountains" in Yi.
Vahxe m & f Yi
Means "surrounding cliff" in Yi.
Vaida f Lithuanian, Estonian
Possibly derived from Lithuanian vaidytis / vaidentis "to appear; to ghost; to haunt" or else a short form of Vaidota and Vaidotė.
Vaige f Estonian
Variant of Vaike.
Vaiki f Estonian
Variant of Vaike.
Vaila f Scottish, Norwegian (Rare)
Taken from the name of a small island off the Shetland Islands, Scotland. It is a traditional Shetlandic girls' name.
Vaira f Latvian
Of debated origin and meaning. While the derivation from Latvian vairot "to add; to increase; to enhance" is commonly accepted, a derivation from Latvian vairīties "to avoid, to shirk" has been suggested.
Vairë f Literature
Means "weaver" in Quenya. This was the name of one of the Valar in Tolkien's 'The Simarillion'. Vairë was the wife of Mandos and the weaver of all the stories of the world.
Vairi f Scottish
Variant of Mhairi.
Vaite f Tahitian
Derived from Tahitian vāite meaning "soul, spirit".
Vajra f & m Indian (Latinized)
From the name of the Buddist ritual weapon that symbolizes the properties of a diamond's indestructibility and a thunderbolt's irresistible force, Sanskrit वज्र (vajra) meaning "diamond; thunderbolt."
Valča f Czech
Diminutive of Valérie.
Valda f Slovene
Truncated form of Evalda.
Valea f Moldovan, German (Modern, Rare)
Moldovan form of Valya. The name coincides with Romanian valea, the definite form of vale "valley, glen".
Valen m & f Spanish
Diminutive of Valentino and Valentina.
Valey f Icelandic
Combination of the Old Norse name elements valr "the slain (in Valhalla)" and ey "island; flat land along a coast" (which is also often related to the Old Norse name element auja "(gift of) luck; fortune").
Valga f Sanskrit, Marathi, Indian, Hinduism, Hindi, Bengali, Nepali, Sinhalese, Gujarati, Tamil
MEANING - a bridle, rein, Goddess Durga
Valia f & m Bulgarian, Georgian (Rare), Greek, Russian
In Bulgaria and Russia, this name is a variant transcription of the unisex name Valya.... [more]
Valka f Bulgarian (Rare)
Feminine form of Valko.
Valka f Old Norse, Icelandic, Popular Culture
Old Norse diminutive of Valgerðr. The name is borne by a character in 'How to Train Your Dragon 2'.
Valle f Spanish
Means "valley" in Spanish, taken from the titles of the Virgin Mary, La Virgen de la Valle and Nuestra Señora de la Valle, meaning "The Virgin of the Valley" and "Our Lady of the Valley" respectively.... [more]
Vally f Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, English, German
Pet form of names beginning with Val-, Wal-.
Vallý f Icelandic (Rare)
Icelandic form of Vally.
Valma f Finnish
19th-century coinage derived from Finnish valmu meaning "poppy".
Valme f Estonian (Archaic)
Possibly a borrowing of Finnish Valma.
Valny f Swedish, Norwegian
Swedish and Norwegian form of Valný.
Valný f Icelandic (Rare)
From Old Norse valr "those slain in battle" combined with nýr "new".
Val'oi f Veps
Veps form of Valentina.
Valor m & f English (Rare)
From the English word valor meaning "bravery, courage". From the Latin valor "value".
Valve f Estonian
Derived from Estonian valve "to guard; watch over".
Valvi f Estonian
Variant of Valve.
Vandy m & f Lao
From Lao ວັນ (van) meaning "day" and ດີ (dy) meaning "good, fine, nice".
Vanes f English
Nickname for "Vanessa" Not commonly used. The name 'Vanessa' was invented by the Anglo-Irish Jonathan Swift in 1708.
Vanga f Bulgarian
Diminutive of Evangeliya.
Vânia f Portuguese
Portuguese form of Vanja.
Vania f Bulgarian
Diminutive of Ivana.
Vaniy m & f Haitian Creole (Modern)
Means "Vanilla" in Creole, His name has given many first names like Aniy.
Vanka f & m Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian
Bulgarian and Macedonian feminine diminutive of Ivana and Russian masculine diminutive of Ivan (rare for Russian girls).
Vanna f Greek
Diminutive of Ioanna.
Vanya f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Vanyo.
Várbu f Sami
Sami form of Valborg.
Varga f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Feminine form of Varg.
Varia f Russian
Variant transliteration of Варя (see Varya).
Vårin f Norwegian (Rare)
Elaboration of Vör, perhaps influenced by Karin. It is also associated with the Norwegian word vår meaning "spring (the season)".
Varja f Estonian (Rare), Slovene
Estonian variant of Varje and Slovene short form of Barbara via Varvara.
Varje f Estonian
Variant of Varve.
Varjo m & f Finnish (Rare)
Means "shadow" in Finnish.
Varju f Estonian
Variant of Varje.
Varma f & m Finnish
Means "sure, certain, reliable" in Finnish.
Vårny f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish combination of vár "spring" and nýr "new, fresh".
Varuk f Nenets
Nenets form of Barbara.
Värun f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Vírún.
Vasha f & m Russian
Either a diminutive of Vasily, Varvara, Valeriy, Valeriya or Ivan.
Vasha f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Nepali, Marathi, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Bengali, Malayalam, Gujarati, Assamese
MEANING - willing, obedient, submissive, free, daughter , woman, female elephant ... [more]
Vasha f Albanian
Derived from Albanian vashë, a poetic term meaning "young girl, maiden".
Vassa f & m Russian, Literature
Variant of Vasya.... [more]
Vassi f Karelian
Karelian diminutive of Vasilisa.
Vásti f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Vashti.
Vasti f Biblical Portuguese, Portuguese (Brazilian), Biblical Dutch, Afrikaans, Biblical Spanish, Biblical Italian, Biblical Finnish
Finnish, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish form of Vashti and Dutch variant of Wasti.
Vasty f Biblical Malagasy, Romani (Archaic)
Malagasy form and Romani variant of Vashti.
Vasvi f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Marathi, Malayalam, Bengali, Gujarati, Assamese, Punjabi
MEANING - night; excellent, beneficent , sweet
Vatsy m & f Malagasy
Means "provisions for a voyage" in Malagasy.
Vaula f Finnish (Rare)
Vaula is both a flower/flowering plant genus ("Asarina" in Latin) and in old Finnish language a little wooden ring that kept a bunch of silver birch branches together in a sauna.
Vayia f Greek (Rare)
Variant transcription of Βάγια (see Vagia).
Veâra f Sami (Skolt)
Skolt Sami female name, possibly a cognate of Vera 1 and influenced by the Russian.
Veata f Khmer
Means "clever" in Khmer.
Vedah f American (Rare, Archaic)
Stage name of silent film actress Vedah Bertram (1891-1912)
Vedha f Indian
Variation of the name Veda
Védís f Old Norse, Icelandic
Derived from Old Norse meaning "temple, sanctuary" and dís meaning "goddess".
Vedis f Norwegian (Rare), Danish (Rare)
Norwegian younger form of Védís.
Vedra f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Vedran.
Veegi f Estonian (Archaic)
Possibly a diminutive of Solveig.
Veena f Indian, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi, Tamil
Variant transcription of Vina.
Veera m & f Indian, Telugu, Punjabi, Thai
Alternate transcription of Vira. It is sometimes used as a feminine name in India while it is only masculine in Thailand.
Veevi f Estonian
Variant of Viivi.
Veeya f Tamil (Rare)
Variant transcription of Tamil வீயா (see Viya).
Vegas m & f English (American, Modern, Rare)
From the name of the city in Nevada. it's derived from Spanish Las Vegas, which translates to "The meadows" in English.
Veiga f Icelandic
Short form of Old Norse names containing the name element veig "power, strength".
Vejîn f Kurdish
Means "resurrection" in Kurdish.
Velda f Estonian
Variant of Valda.
Velga f Latvian
Of uncertain origin and meaning, although a derivation from Latvian veldze "refreshment" has been suggested.
Vélia f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Velia.
Velim f Dagbani
Means "beauty" in Dagbani.
Velka f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Velko.
Vella f American, English
Diminutive of Velvet.
Vella f Finnish, Estonian
Short form of Vellamo.
Velli f Estonian
Variant of Vella.
Velva f American (South)
Diminutive of Velvet but has been used as a name in its own right for decades.
Vendi f & m Telugu
Means "silver" in Telugu.
Vendi f Italian
Italian borrowing of Wendy.
Venea f American (South, Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Vena.
Venia f Greek
Diminutive of Evgenia.
Venia f English (Rare)
Short form of Luvenia, or from Latin venia meaning "grace; indulgence; favor; forgiveness". This name has been in occasional use in the English-speaking world since the 19th century.
Venie f American
Diminutive of Lavinia or names containing the element ven, such as Ravenna.
Venka f Bulgarian
Feminine form of Venko.
Venke f Norwegian
Variant of Wenke.
Venlá f Sami
Sami form of Venla.
Venna f English
Possibly a nickname for names like Venice, Vanessa, Veronica and other names that begin with the letter V.
Venni m & f Finnish
A diminutive of Verner and Vendela.
Venta f Lithuanian (Modern, Rare), Latvian (Rare)
Transferred use of the name of the river Venta which flows through north-western Lithuania and western Latvia.
Veola f English
Variant of Viola.
Verda f Turkish
Turkish form of Warda.
Verda f English
Possibly derived from verde a Spanish and Italian word meaning "green" (see Viridis).
Verdi m & f English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Verdi. A famous person with the surname is Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi. A famous namesake is Australian Olympic weightlifter Verdi "Vern" Barberis, who is in the AWF Hall of Fame.
Verka f Bulgarian, Slovene
Diminutive form of Vera 1.
Verki f Mordvin
Mordvin form of Vera 1.
Verla f American (South, Rare)
Possibly feminine of Verl.
Versa f American (South)
This name sporadically appears outside the U.S. top 1000 in the American South in the early 20th-century. It is most likely inspired by the Latin word "versus" (verse; line) probably used by Southern Baptists in reference to the verses of the Bible... [more]
Verve f & m English
Variant of Virve.
Vesla f Norwegian (Rare)
Directly taken from Norwegian vesle "little".
Vēsma f Latvian
Directly taken from Latvian vēsma "breeze, whiff".
Vespa f American
Possible feminization of Vespasian.
Vessa f English
Possibly a shortened form of Vanessa or a variant of Vesa 2.
Vessa m & f English
Neutral form of Vanessa.
Vėtra f Lithuanian (Rare)
Derived from Lithuanian vėtra "storm, tempest".
Vētra f Latvian (Rare)
Directly taken from Latvian vētra "storm, tempest, gale".
Vette f English
Short form of Yvette.
Veula f American (Rare, Archaic)
Possibly a variant of Beulah.
Vezia f Italian (Rare)
Of debated origin and meaning. Some scholars consider this name a short form of Elvezia, while other see a connection to the Ancient Roman masculine Vetius... [more]
Vhera f Filipino
A goddess of rice field.
Viana f Medieval Catalan, American (South, Archaic)
Of unknown origin and meaning.
Viana f Occitan
Occitan form of Vianne.
Viana f Spanish, Italian
Short form of Viviana.
Viann f English (American)
the name Viann dates back to 1880s, the meaning for this name isn't well known/it has multiple meanings "violet" which could either mean the colour violet, this name could also mean "violet and power in the earth element", it could be of greek origin meaning "vivid", or it could mean "popular"... [more]
Viara f Bulgarian
Variant transcription of Bulgarian Вяра (see Vyara).
Vibha f Indian, Hindi
Means "light, lustre, splendour" in Sanskrit.
Vibia f Late Roman
Feminine form of Vibius.
Vibse f Danish
Variant of Vibs.
Vichi f & m Italian
Diminutive of Vittoria and Vittorio.
Vicie f English (Rare)
This name was given to 31 baby girls in the year 1920
Vicke m & f Swedish
Swedish diminutive of Viktor and Viktoria.
Vicky f Greek
Variant of Viky influenced by the English name Vicky.
Vicra m & f Hinduism
Sanskrit work
Vidhi f Gujarati (Archaic)
"Goddess of destiny; The way"... [more]
Vidia f Indonesian
Indonesian form of Vidya.
Vidia f Norwegian (Rare)
Short form of Ovidia.
Vidka f Slovene
Diminutive of Vida 2, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Vidra f Serbian (Rare)
The Slavic name for "otter", an animal traditionally associated with great agility and swiftness of movement.
Viely f & m Khmer (Rare)
Means "something new" or also "a ray of sunlight" in Khmer.
Viena f Finnish
Variant of Vieno. Viena may also refer to the area of White Sea Karelia or White Karelia in the northwestern Russia, known as Vienan Karjala or Viena in Finnish and Karelian.
Viena f Spanish (Modern, Rare)
Derived from place name Viena, which is the Spanish name for the city of Vienna.
Viere f Yakut
Yakut form of Vera 1.
Viese f Popular Culture
One of two main viewpoint characters in the Japanese video game Atelier Iris 2, Viese Blanchimont.
Vieve f Dutch, English
Diminutive of Genevieve.
Vigun f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Vígundr.
Vigya f & m Sanskrit, Indian
The name Vigya is derived from Sanskrit word Vigy...Vigya means a versatile genius
Vihra f Bulgarian
Derived from Bulgarian вихър "gale; whirlwind".
Viima m & f Finnish (Modern, Rare)
From a Finnish word meaning "strong wind".
Viinu f Finnish
Finnish form of Vina.
Viise f Estonian
Short form of Loviise.
Viive f Estonian
Variant of Viivi.
Vilai f & m Thai, Lao
Thai alternate transcription of Wilai as well as the Lao cognate. In Thailand it is solely used as a feminine name while it is unisex (more commonly masculine) in Laos.
Vilay m & f Lao
Alternate transcription of Vilai.
Vilda f Swedish, Finland Swedish
Originally a short form of Alvilda. Nowadays mostly associated with the Swedish vocabulary word meaning "wild".
Vilhe m & f Finnish
Short form of Vilhelm.
Vilkė f Lithuanian (Rare)
Means "she-wolf" in Lithuanian.
Villi m & f Finnish, Estonian
Means "wild" in Finnish. It could also be used as a shortening of Villiam.
Villő f Hungarian (Modern)
Recent Hungarian name based on the title of Zoltán Kodály's children's choir formed in 1925. The word villő occurs in poems and songs sung during the old Hungarian winter cemetery ceremony and seeing as the girls walked the village with twigs during the shooting, villő is probably derived from the Latin villus "tuft of hair" (referring to the fine soft hairs on fruits, flowers, and other parts of plants)... [more]
Villy m & f Danish, Swedish, Norwegian
Scandinavian form of Willy, predominantly used by men.
Villy f Greek
Variant of Vili.
Vilnė f Lithuanian
The name may either come directly from the Lithuanian word vilna meaning "wool" or vilnis "to surge." The name may also be used in reference to the Vilnia river as well as the name of the city, Vilnius which both share the same etymological root with vilnis.
Vilný f Icelandic (Rare)
From Old Norse vili "will, desire" combined with nýr "new".
Vilve f Estonian
Variant of Vilvi.
Vilvi f Estonian (Rare)
Allegedly a variant of Valve.
Vimbo f Shona
Means "faith, trust" in Shona.
Vimla f Indian, Hindi, Marathi
Feminine form of Vimal.
Vimol f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimon.
Vimon f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimon.
Vinca f English (Rare), French (Rare), French (Belgian, Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Derived from vinca, the Latin name for the "periwinkle", ultimately from Latin vincio "to bind". This name has been in use since the 20th century.
Vincė f Lithuanian
Short form of Vincentė. In other words, you could say that this name is the feminine equivalent of Vincas.
Vinda m & f Hinduism
Taken from Mitravinda, one of the eight principal queen-consorts of the Hindu god Krishna.
Viney f American
Diminutive of Lavinia.
Vinie f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Vinnie.
Vinit m & f Thai
Alternate transcription of Winit.
Vinni f & m English
Variant of Vinnie.
Vinný f Icelandic, Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese variant of Winnie.
Víóla f Icelandic (Modern), Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese form of Viola.
Violy f Filipino
Diminutive of Violeta.
Viqui f Spanish
Diminutive of Victoria.
Virak f & m Khmer
Means "strength" in Khmer.
Viran f Swedish (Rare)
Diminutive of Elvira.
Viran m & f Hindi
Means "heroic" and "brave" in Sanskrit.
Virba f Sami
Sami form of Virpi.
Vireo m & f English
From Latin vireo, a word Pliny uses for some kind of bird, perhaps the greenfinch, from virere "be green" (see Viridius), which in modern times is applied to an American bird.
Virga f Esperanto
Means "virginal" in Esperanto.
Virga f Lithuanian
Short form of feminine names that start with Virg-, such as Virgailė, Virgauda and Virginija.
Virge f Estonian
Directly taken from Estonian virge "alert, wakeful".
Virgi f Estonian
Variant of Virge.
Virgy f English
Variant of Virgie, which itself is a diminutive of Virginia.
Viria f South American
Possibly a female form of Viriato.
Virpi f Finnish
Means "sapling" in Finnish, a Finnish equivalent of Virve. It was coined in the early 20th century.
Virta f & m Finnish
Means "river"
Vírún f Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements "home, temple, sanctuary" and rún "secret".
Virvá f Sami
Sami form of Virva.
Virya m & f Sanskrit
Vīrya (Sanskrit; Pāli: viriya) is a Buddhist term commonly translated as "energy", "persistence", "persevering", "vigour", "effort", "exertion", or "diligence"... [more]
Visha f Indian, Sanskrit, Hindi, Hinduism, Sinhalese, Kannada, Malayalam
MEANING - Atis tree, Aconite tree(its bark is used as dye), feces, wisdom, intellect
Visna f Old Norse, Norse Mythology
Old Norse name of unknown origin and meaning. Visna is the name of a warrior-like queen mentioned in the Gesta Danorum.
Viula f Finnish
Finnish variant of Viola.
Vivan f Swedish
Diminutive of Viveka and Vivianne.
Vivee f English
Diminutive of Vivian
Vivie f Various
Diminutive of Vivian and other Viv- names.
Vivio f Popular Culture
It comes from the Subaru Vivio, a kei car that was introduced in March 1992, and manufactured by Subaru until October 1998. Vivio Takamachi from Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS is a fictional bearer of this name.
Vixey f Popular Culture
Diminutive of Vixen, referring to a female fox. This name was used on a character in Disney's 1981 animated film 'The Fox and the Hound'.