Browse Names

This is a list of names in which the gender is feminine; and the usage is Indigenous American; and the place is Greenland.
gender
usage
place
Arnaq f Greenlandic, Inuit
Means "woman" in Greenlandic and Inuktitut.
Aviaaja f Greenlandic
Means "cousin" in East Greenlandic.
Ivaana f Greenlandic
Feminine form of Ivaaq.
Ivalu f Greenlandic
Means "sinew, tendon, thread" in Greenlandic. It was used by the Danish explorer and author Peter Freuchen for the heroine of his novel Ivalu, the Eskimo Wife (1930).
Kimmernaq f Greenlandic
Means "cowberry, lingonberry" in Greenlandic.
Miillaaraq f Greenlandic
Possibly from Greenlandic millalaarpoq meaning "drone, hum (of an insect)" combined with the diminutive suffix -araq.
Minik m & f Greenlandic
Means "seal oil" in Greenlandic. A notable bearer was the Inughuit boy Minik (1890-1918), who was among a group brought by the explorer Robert Peary from Greenland to New York in 1897.
Naasunnguaq f Greenlandic
Means "little flower" in Greenlandic, from naasoq "flower, plant" and the diminutive suffix -nnguaq.
Naja f Greenlandic, Danish
From Greenlandic najaa meaning "his younger sister". It was popularized in Denmark by the writer B. S. Ingemann, who used it in his novel Kunnuk and Naja, or the Greenlanders (1842).
Nauja f Greenlandic, Inuit
Means "seagull" in Greenlandic and Inuktitut.
Nivi f Greenlandic
Short form of Greenlandic niviarsiaq meaning "young girl".
Niviarsiaq f Greenlandic
Means "young girl" in Greenlandic. This is the name of a variety of flower that grows on Greenland, the dwarf fireweed (species Chamaenerion latifolium).
Nuka m & f Greenlandic
From Greenlandic nukaa meaning "younger sibling".
Paninnguaq f Greenlandic
Means "little daughter" in Greenlandic, from panik "daughter" and the diminutive suffix -nnguaq.
Piloqutinnguaq f Greenlandic
Means "little leaf" in Greenlandic, from piloqut "leaf" and the diminutive suffix -nnguaq.
Pipaluk f Greenlandic
Means "sweet little thing who belongs to me" in Greenlandic.
Sacagawea f Indigenous American
Probably from Hidatsa tsakáka wía meaning "bird woman". Alternatively it could originate from the Shoshone language and mean "boat puller". This name was borne by a Native American woman who guided the explorers Lewis and Clark. She was of Shoshone ancestry but had been abducted in her youth and raised by a Hidatsa tribe.
Sissinnguaq f Greenlandic
Means "squirrel" in Greenlandic.
Tulugaq m & f Greenlandic, Inuit
Means "raven" in Greenlandic and Inuktitut.
Tupaarnaq f Greenlandic
Means "wild thyme" in Greenlandic.
Ujarak m & f Greenlandic
Means "stone" in Greenlandic.
Ukaleq f Greenlandic
Means "hare" in Greenlandic.
Ulloriaq m & f Greenlandic
Means "star" in Greenlandic.