Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the first letter is V.
gender
usage
letter
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Vilbmá f Sami
Sami form of Wilma.
Vilborg f Icelandic
Nordic form of Wilburg.
Vilda f Swedish, Finland Swedish
Originally a short form of Alvilda. Nowadays mostly associated with the Swedish vocabulary word meaning "wild".
Vildan f & m Turkish, Bashkir, Bosnian
Derived from Arabic وِلْدَان‏ (wildān) meaning "children". It is also a Bashkir variant transcription of Uyildan, of the same origin.
Vildana f Bosnian
Feminine form of Vildan.
Vildina f American (Rare)
Possibly an elaboration of Vilda.
Vildís f Icelandic
Combination of the Old Norse elements vil(i) "will, desire" and dís "goddess; woman, lady; sister" or dis "wise woman, seeress; woman, virgin".
Vildred f Norwegian
Modern coinage taken from Vilhelm and the feminine ending -(f)rid.
Vilė f Lithuanian
Short form of feminine names that start with Vil- (such as Vilgailė and Vilmantė) or end in -vilė, such as Akvilė and Norvilė.
Vilelmini f Greek
Greek form of Wilhelmine.
Vilemína f Czech
Feminine form of Vilém.
Vilena f Russian
Feminine form of Vilen.
Vilena f Croatian
Variant of Vilina.
Vilenka f Croatian (Rare)
Very rare name in Croatia, exclusively for women and most commonly used in the coastal region. Meaning uncertain, possibly coming from the mythological creature ''Vila'' (Slavic fae).
Vilette f English
Alternate spelling of Villette, a French word for a small town or village.
Vilgailė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Vilgailas.
Vilgaudė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Vilgaudas.
Vilgerd f Norwegian (Rare)
Norwegian younger form of Vilgerðr.
Vilgerð f Faroese
Faroese form of Vilgerðr.
Vilgerðr f Old Norse
Old Norse combination of vil 'will, desire' and garðr 'enclosure', 'protection'.
Vilgintė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Vilgintas.
Vilgirdė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Vilgirdas.
Vilhe m & f Finnish
Short form of Vilhelm.
Vilhelma f Hungarian, Norwegian (Archaic), Swedish (Rare), Finnish (Rare), Lithuanian
Hungarian, Lithuanian, Swedish, Finnish and Norwegian form of Wilhelma.
Vilhelmína f Icelandic, Slovak (Archaic)
Icelandic and Slovak form of Wilhelmina.
Vilhelmine f Danish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare)
Danish and Norwegian form of Wilhelmine.
Vili f Greek
Diminutive of Vasiliki and Vilelmini.
Viliberta f Italian (Rare)
Italian feminine form of Willibert.
Viliina f Finnish
A feminine form of Vili or a short form of Akviliina.
Vilija f Lithuanian (Modern)
From the name of the river which flows in Lithuania through it's capital city Vilnius. Official river name is Neris, but it has a second name - Vilija. The reasons for the dual naming of the river as Neris by the Lithuanians and Viliya (formerly Velja, meaning "big, great" in Slavic) by the Slavs are complex... [more]
Vilija f Latvian
Feminine form of Vilis. In some cases it might also be an adoption of the Lithuanian name.
Vilímîna f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Wilhelmina.
Vilimmiina f Greenlandic
Greenlandic younger form of Vilímîna.
Vilina f Russian, Bulgarian, Croatian (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic element vila meaning "fairy".
Vilkė f Lithuanian (Rare)
Means "she-wolf" in Lithuanian.
Villana f Medieval Italian, History (Ecclesiastical)
Derived from Latin villana "villein, feudal tenant" (compare Villanus). Villana de' Botti (1332 - 1361) was an Italian Roman Catholic professed member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic... [more]
Villanelle f American (Modern, Rare), Literature
This was used by English writer Jeanette Winterson in her novel 'The Passion' (1987). She may have taken it from the English word for a form of poetry, which is ultimately cognate with Villana.
Villaviciosa f Spanish (Rare)
From the titles of the Virgin Mary, La Virgen de Villaviciosa and Nuestra Señora de Villaviciosa, meaning "The Virgin of Villaviciosa" and "Our Lady of Villaviciosa" respectively.... [more]
Villemo f Swedish, Norwegian (Rare), Literature
This name was first used by the Swedish writer August Strindberg (1849-1912) for one of his poems. He may have based it on the names Vellamo or Wilhelma, or perhaps he combined the Old Norse name element vil, vili "will, desire" with Scandinavian mor "mother" (compare Lillemor, Moa).
Villi m & f Finnish, Estonian
Means "wild" in Finnish. It could also be used as a shortening of Villiam.
Villija f Latvian (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Vilija.
Villimey f Icelandic (Modern)
Recently created name intended to mean "wild maiden" from Old Norse villr "wild" (compare Icelandic villiblóm "wildflower") combined with Old Norse mey "maiden, girl" (an alternative form of mær)... [more]
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.
Vilmeke f Low German, Frisian
Low German and Frisian diminutive of Wilma.
Vilmiina f Finnish
Finnish short form of Vilhelmiina.
Vilminka f Czech
Diminutive of Vilma.
Vilmita f Spanish
Diminutive of Vilma.
Vilmuška f Slovak
Diminutive form of Vilma.
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".
Vilora f Soviet, Russian (Rare)
Russian given name of Soviet origin, which was derived from a combination of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and October Revolution.
Vilve f Estonian
Variant of Vilvi.
Vilvi f Estonian (Rare)
Allegedly a variant of Valve.
Vily f Greek
Variant of Vili.
Vimbainashe f Shona
Means "have faith in God" in Shona.
Vimbayi f Shona
Means "have faith" in Shona.
Vimbina m & f Malagasy
Means "carry in the arms, carry in the hands" in Malagasy.
Vimbo f Shona
Means "faith, trust" in Shona.
Vimean f Khmer
Means "royalty" in Khmer.
Vimla f Indian, Hindi, Marathi
Feminine form of Vimal.
Vimol f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimon.
Vimolrat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimonrat.
Vimolsiri f Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimonsiri.
Vimon f & m Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimon.
Vimonrat f Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimonrat.
Vimonsiri f Thai
Alternate transcription of Wimonsiri.
Vimy f & m English (British, Rare), English (Canadian, Rare)
From the name of Vimy in the Pas-de-Calais department of France, where the Battle of Vimy Ridge took place from 9 to 12 April 1917 during the First World War.
Vina f Kurdish
A person who can see beyond what others see , and a person who understands everything.
Vinari f Georgian (Rare)
Derived from Georgian ვინ არის (vin aris) meaning "who is", which in turn is derived from the Georgian pronoun ვინ (vin) meaning "who" and the Georgian verb არის (aris) meaning "to be".... [more]
Vinata f Hinduism
According to Hindu legends, Vinata is the mother of birds. She is one of the thirteen daughters of Prajapati Daksha. Married to Kashyapa along with her 12 sisters. She bore him two sons, named Aruṇá, and Garuda (Suparna).
Vinata f Indonesian
Transferred use of the surname Vinata.
Vinaya f Indian
Of Sanskrit and Pāli origin, meaning "leading out; education; discipline".... [more]
Vinayika f Sanskrit, Hindi, Hinduism, Tamil, Indian, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Nepali
MEANING - remover of obstacles, female leader, female preceptor, a term for wife of lord Ganesha
Vinbjörg f Icelandic (Rare)
Derived from Old Norse vinr "friend" and bjǫrg "help, save, rescue".
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.
Vincénça f Provençal
Feminine form of Vincenç.
Vincença f Lengadocian
Feminine form of Vincenç.
Vincéncia f Gascon
Feminine form of Vincenç.
Vincencia f Hungarian, Slovak
Hungarian and Slovak feminine form of Vincent.
Vincencie f Czech (Rare)
Feminine form of Vincenc.
Vincencija f Slovene, Serbian, Croatian
Croatian, Serbian, and Slovene feminine form of Vincent.
Vincensia f Corsican
Feminine form of Vincensiu.
Vincenta f Lithuanian, Croatian
Lithuanian and Croatian feminine form of Vincent.
Vincentė f Lithuanian (Rare)
Feminine form of Vincentas. Also compare Vincė.
Vincentina f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Vincent.
Vincentine f French (Rare)
Rare French feminine form of Vincent.
Vincia f Italian, English (Rare)
The name Vincia is used in the modern Italian language. It's a feminine form of Vincent.
Vinciane f French, French (Belgian)
French feminine form of Vincianus.
Vincinette f German
A feminine form to Vincent.... [more]
Vinda m & f Hinduism
Taken from Mitravinda, one of the eight principal queen-consorts of the Hindu god Krishna.
Vindemiatrix f Astronomy
Means "(female) grape harvester" in Latin. This is the name of the third brightest star in the constellation Virgo, and is so named because it rises in early autumn, the beginning of the wine harvesting season.
Vîne f Greenlandic
Greenlandic form of Winnie.
Vineke f Danish
Nordic form of Wineke.
Vineli f Georgian (Rare)
Derived from Georgian ვინც ელის (vints elis) meaning "who is waiting" or "who is expecting", which in turn is derived from the Georgian pronoun ვინ (vin) meaning "who" and the Georgian verb ლოდინი (lodini) meaning "to expect, to await"... [more]
Vinette f Jamaican Patois, English (Rare)
Either a diminutive of Vina or a transferred use of the surname Vinette.
Vinevyt f Chukchi
Means "deceased" in Chukchi. This name was given to children as a reference the spirits or souls of deceased ancestors or family members.
Viney f American
Diminutive of Lavinia.
Vinfreda f Italian (Rare)
Italian feminine form of Winifrid.
Vingra f Latvian
Derived from Latvian vingrs "agile; dexterous".
Vĩnh m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 永 (vĩnh) meaning "perpetual, eternal".
Vini f Indian, Sanskrit, Malayalam, Marathi
MEANING - instruct, guide, educate, chastise, elicit, restore, avert, exel, accomplish, train, remove, induce, pay off, drive away
Vini m & f English, Brazilian
Short form of Vincent, Vincenzina, Vinicius or other names containing the element vin.
Vinicia f Italian, Spanish
Feminine form of Vinicio.
Vinie f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Vinnie.
Vinifred f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish adoption of Winifred.
Vinit m & f Thai
Alternate transcription of Winit.
Vinita f Sanskrit, Indian
Derived from Sanskrit vinIta (विनीत) "lovely; handsome; trained".
Vinnette f English (American)
Combination of Vinnie with the French feminine diminutive suffix -ette (or with a name that contains it, such as Annette)... [more]
Vinni f & m English
Variant of Vinnie.
Vinnie f English (American)
Diminutive of Lavinia. A notable bearer was the American sculptor Lavinia Ellen "Vinnie" Ream Hoxie (1847-1914), known professionally as Vinnie Ream, who is most well known for her statue of President Abraham Lincoln on display in the United States Capitol rotunda... [more]
Vinný f Icelandic, Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese variant of Winnie.
Vinolia f Italian
Means “peace” in Old English. This name increased in popularity in Italy in the 2000s.
Vinsensia f Indonesian
Indonesian form of Vincentia.
Vintanasoa m & f Malagasy
Means "good luck" in Malagasy. From vintana (meaning luck) and soa (meaning good).
Vinter m & f Old Swedish, Swedish (Modern, Rare), Danish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare), Finnish (Rare)
Old Swedish form of Vetr meaning "winter" as well as the modern Scandinavian word for "winter" (see Winter).
Vinterny f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Combination of Swedish vinter "winter" and ny "new".
Vintra f Latvian (Modern, Rare)
Of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a variant of Dzintra and a feminine form of Lithuanian Vintaras.
Vintsantsina f Belarusian
Feminine form of Vintsent.
Vinu f & m Tamil
Vinuji f sri lankan (Rare)
"Good luck, kindness, knowledge"
Vinushia f Tamil
Variant of Venusha or feminine form of Vinushi.
Viny m & f English
Variant of Vinnie.
Vinyette f African American
Alternate spelling of the word vignette.
Vioara f Romanian (Rare)
Derived from Romanian vioară "violet".
Viol f Danish
Short form of Viola.
Víóla f Icelandic (Modern), Faroese
Icelandic and Faroese form of Viola.
Violaine f French, Theatre
Invented by Paul Claudel for his play L'Annonce faite à Marie (1912), the first version of which was titled La Jeune Fille Violaine (1892). It is often regarded as a variant of Violante, though Claudel may have taken it from a French place name.
Violandra f Theatre
Likely an elaboration of Violanda (a form of Violante) using the suffix andra (from names such as Alexandra and Cassandra)... [more]
Violant f Catalan
Catalan form of Violante.
Violanta f Italian, Romansh, Sardinian
Italian variant and Romansh form of Violante.
Violâte f Norman
Norman form of Violante.
Violencia f Obscure
Spanish word for "violence", which has been occasionally used as a given name.
Violenta f Theatre, Hungarian
Cognate of Violante. The name of a ghost character in Shakespeare's play 'All's Well That Ends Well' (first published 1623).
Violetka f Bulgarian
Derived from Bulgarian виолетка "violet".
Violett f English (Modern), Norwegian (Rare), Swedish (Rare), Hungarian (Rare), Afrikaans (Rare)
English variant and Swedish form of Violet as well as a Hungarian borrowing of French Violette. This name coincides with the Swedish word violett "purple (the color)".
Violita f Spanish (Philippines)
Diminutive of Viola, or an altered form of Violeta.
Viollca f Albanian
Variant of Vjollca.
Violy f Filipino
Diminutive of Violeta.
Vionnet f & m American (Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Vionnet.
Viorella f Obscure
Variant of Viorela.
Viorika f Hungarian
Hungarian borrowing of Viorica.
Vipashyana f Indian, Marathi (Rare)
Derived from Sanskrit विपश्यना (vipaśyanā) meaning "right knowledge".
Viphearvy f Khmer
Means "scholar" in Khmer.
Vipsania f Ancient Roman
Feminine form of Vipsanius.
Viqui f Spanish
Diminutive of Victoria.
Viradecdis f Germanic Mythology
From wiro- "truth" and dekos "honor", interpreted to mean "the truth-honored". The name of a Celtic/Germanic deity.
Virajanti f Indian
MEANING : Shining, Brilliant. Beautiful lady... [more]
Viraji f & m Sanskrit, Indian, Hindi, Sinhalese
MEANING : free from dust, Clean, Pure
Virajini f Punjabi, Sanskrit, Hindi, Hinduism, Nepali, Kannada, Telugu
Means "shining, brilliant, splendid" in Sanskrit.
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.
Virani f Indian
Means 'Alone.'
Virba f Sami
Sami form of Virpi.
Virdiana f Sicilian
Sicilian form of Viridiana.
Virdie f English
Possibly a diminutive of Alverda or other similar names.
Virdžinėjė f Lithuanian
Saimogaitian (Lithuanian dialect) form of Virginia.
Virdžīnija f Latvian (Rare)
Latvian borrowing of Virginia.
Virena f Various
Variant of Verena.
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.
Virgailė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Virgailas.
Virgaudė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Virgaudas.
Virge f Estonian
Directly taken from Estonian virge "alert, wakeful".
Virgi f Estonian
Variant of Virge.
Virgia f American (South)
This was given to 6 girls in Alabama in 1913, most likely an elaborate form of Virginia.
Virgilia f Late Roman, Theatre, Italian, Spanish
Feminine form of Vergilius (see Virgil). This is the name of Coriolanus' wife in Shakespeare's play of the same name.
Virgin f & m English (Puritan)
Simply from the English word virgin, meaning "pure".
Virgine f English
A variant of Virginia
Virgínia f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Virginia.
Virginía f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Virginia.
Virginiensis f Roman Mythology
Derivative of Latin virgo meaning "maiden, virgin". According to Augustine, Virginiensis was a Roman goddess that presided over the loosing of the bridal zone, the zone being a belt or girdle worn by adult women which was meant to be knotted prior to a bride's wedding and untied by her husband on their wedding night; see also Cinxia.
Virginnia f Ligurian
Ligurian form of Virginia.
Virginnie f Jèrriais
Jèrriais form of Virginia.
Virgy f English
Variant of Virgie, which itself is a diminutive of Virginia.
Virhiniya f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Virginia.
Viria f South American
Possibly a female form of Viriato.
Viribunda f Folklore
From a Swedish fairy tale by Anna Maria Roos 'Prins Florestan eller sagan om jätten Bam-Bam och feen Viribunda' "Prince Florestan or the saga of he giant Bam Bam and the fairy Viribunda" that inspired Astrid Lindgren's novel 'Mio, my son'.... [more]
Viridi f Popular Culture
Viridi is the Goddess of Nature who debuted in the game Kid Icarus: Uprising, displaying the physical appearance of a sarcastic 8-year-old little girl who commands the Forces of Nature.
Viridian m & f American (Modern, Rare)
Viridian is a blue-green pigment, a hydrated chromium oxide, of medium saturation and relatively dark in value. It is composed more of green than blue.
Viridianne f American (Modern, Rare)
Ultimately from the Latin viridis meaning "green", it is cognate of Viridiana.
Viridis f Italian (Archaic), Medieval Italian
Derived from the Latin color word viridis "green".... [more]
Virika f Sanskrit
Means "brave" in Sanskrit.
Virineya f Mordvin, Russian (Rare)
Claimed to be a Mordvin name meaning "seeing in the forest". This was used for the title character of 'Virineya' (1969), a Soviet film which was ultimately based on a 1924 novel by Lidiya Seyfullina (1889-1954).
Viring f Filipino, Tagalog
Diminutive of Virginia, Veronica, and other names containing vir or ver.
Viriola f Eastern African (Rare), Ancient Roman (?)
Attia Viriola was a client of the ancient Roman lawyer and statesman Pliny the Younger (61-113), whose legal case he described in his Epistles.
Virjean f English (American, Rare)
Variant of Virgene influenced by Jean 2.
Virmantė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Virmantas.
Virocha f Galician
Hypocoristic of Elvira.
Virpi f Finnish
Means "sapling" in Finnish, a Finnish equivalent of Virve. It was coined in the early 20th century.
Virsavee f Greek
Modern Greek form of Bersabee, which is the ancient Greek form of Bathsheba. Also compare the Russian name Virsaviya.
Virsaviia f Ukrainian
Ukrainian form of Bathsheba
Virsavija f Belarusian
Belarusian form of Bathsheba.
Virsaviya f Russian
Russian form of Bathsheba via its modern Greek form Virsavee.
Virta f & m Finnish
Means "river"
Virtud f Spanish (Rare)
Singular form of Virtudes.
Virtude f Portuguese
Singular form of Virtudes.
Virtue f English (Puritan)
This name was very occasionally used by Puritan parents in 17th century England. It ltimately derived from Latin virtus "manliness; valor; worth".
Virtutz f Aragonese
Aragonese form of Virtudes.
Viruca f Galician
Hypocoristic of Elvira.
Vírún f Old Norse
Derived from the Germanic name elements "home, temple, sanctuary" and rún "secret".
Virvá f Sami
Sami form of Virva.
Virvla f Swedish (Modern, Rare)
Directly taken from the Swedish word virvla "to swirl; to whirl".
Virxinia f Galician
Galician form of Virginia.
Virya m & f Sanskrit
Vīrya (Sanskrit; Pāli: viriya) is a Buddhist term commonly translated as "energy", "persistence", "persevering", "vigour", "effort", "exertion", or "diligence"... [more]
Virzsini f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Virginia.
Visa f Thai
Alternate transcription of Wisa.
Visalgė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visalgas.
Visara f Albanian
Feminine form of Visar.
Visenya f Literature
Used in Goerge R. R. Martin's "Song of ice and fire". ... [more]
Visgailė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visgailas.
Visgaudė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visgaudas.
Visgedė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visgedas.
Visgintė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visgintas.
Visgirdė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Visgirdas.
Visha f Indian, Sanskrit, Hindi, Hinduism, Sinhalese, Kannada, Malayalam
MEANING - Atis tree, Aconite tree(its bark is used as dye), feces, wisdom, intellect
Vishada f Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Hinduism, Marathi, Nepali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Bengali, Malayalam, Gujarati, Indian (Sikh), Assamese
MEANING - spotless, brilliant, bright, calm, evident, intelligible, clear, cheerful