This is a list of submitted names in which the ending sequence is a or ah.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Ziara f ArabicAn Arabic name meaning "visit" and "visitation".
Zidartha m Hinduism (Americanized, Rare)The name Zidartha derives from the name
Siddhartha better known as The Buddha, l. c. 563 - c. 483 BCE. He was, according to legend, a Hindu prince who renounced his position and wealth to seek enlightenment as a spiritual ascetic, attained his goal and, in preaching his path to others, founded Buddhism in India in the 6th-5th centuries BCE... [
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Zifona m LazMeans “storm” and/or “wind” in Laz.
Zijia f ChineseFrom the Chinese
紫 (zǐ) meaning "purple, violet" and
佳 (jiā) meaning "good, beautiful, auspicious".
Zilika f Sanskrit (Rare)Another variation for Sanskrit name "Jhilika" which means Sunlight, the strong light of sun.
Zilya f Tatar, BashkirMeans "radiant, clarity, illumination" from Arabic ضِيَاء
(ḍiyāʾ) meaning "splendour, light, glow" (see
Ziya).
Zimba f & m ShonaMeans "to be principled" in Shona.
Zinat un-Nisa f HistoryClassical Persian name meaning "jewel among women", from Persian زینت
(zinat) "jewel, ornament" (compare
Zinat) and Arabic النِّسَاء
(an-nisāʔ) "women" (compare
Nisa)... [
more]
Zinta f LatvianDerived from Latvian
zinte "magic, charms, witchcraft".
Ziola m & f IjawMeans "the last born" in Ijaw.
Ziortza f BasqueMeans "place of daneworts", from Basque
zihaurri meaning "danewort, dwarf elder" and the suffix
-tza, which indicates a place abundant in something. This is the name of a collegiate church dedicated to the Virgin
Mary on the Way of St... [
more]
Ziplantawiya f Ancient Near Eastern, HittiteOf uncertain origin, but possibly using the Luwian feminine suffix
-wiya ("woman"). Name borne by a sister of the Hittite king Tudhaliya I. Her name is mentioned in a ritual to protect her brother from witchcraft that she allegedly carried out in an attempt to curse him.
Zitkala-ša f SiouxMeans "red bird" from Lakota
ziŋtkála "bird" and
šá "red". This name was adopted by a Yankton Dakota writer and political activist, birth name Gertrude Simmons (1876-1938).
Ziusudra m Near Eastern Mythology, SumerianMeaning, "life of long days." The name of a king listed in the Sumerian king list; listed as the last king of Sumer prior to the deluge and subsequently recorded as the hero of the Sumerian flood epic... [
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Života m SerbianDerived from the Serbian
živ, meaning "alive, living, vivacious".
Ziwa f ChineseFrom the Chinese
紫 (zǐ) meaning "purple, violet" and
娃 (wá) meaning "doll, pretty girl".
Zixia f ChineseFrom the Chinese
紫 (zǐ) meaning "purple, violet" or
子 (zi) meaning "child" and
霞 (xiá) meaning "rosy clouds".
Ziyoda f UzbekMeans "more, numerous, abundant" derived from Persian زیاد
(ziyâd) meaning "much, a lot, many".
Ziyoxo'ja m UzbekDerived from the Uzbek
ziyo meaning "divine light" or "enlightenment" and
xo'ja meaning "master".
Ziza m BiblicalFrom Hebrew זִיז (
ziyz) "abundance" or "wild beast". This name is mentioned in the Old Testament as belonging to two Israelites.
Zizah m BiblicalForm of
Ziza which occurs briefly in the Old Testament (1 Chronicles 23:10), belonging to a Levite.
Zӧlxizä f BashkirFrom the Arabic
ذُو الْحِجَّة (ḏū l-ḥijja) meaning “twelfth month of the Islamic calendar”.
Zmagoslava f Slovene (Rare)Slovenian feminine name derived from the word
zmaga meaning "victory" and the Slavic name element
slava meaning ''glory''.
Zocueca f Spanish (European, Rare)From the Spanish title of the Virgin Mary,
La Virgen de Zocueca, meaning "The Virgin of Zocueca," venerated at the sanctuary in Guarromán in the Andalusian province of Jaén in southern Spain.
Zoetia f Ancient Greek (Rare)Etymology certain, possibly a form of
Zoe. It may be a feminine form of Greek Ζωητός
(Zoetos), which meant "capable of being vitalized".
Zofiyah f GreekZofiyah originates from Poland as a variation of the greek name
Sofia. The name means "wisdom" or is often a name to describe a girl who should be Sophisticated.
Zofka f Polish, Slovene, KashubianPolish and Slovene diminutive of
Zofia and Kashubian diminutive of
Zofiô. Zofka Kveder (1878 – 1926) is considered one of the first Slovene women writers and feminists.
Zöhrä f Tatar, BashkirFrom Arabic
زُهْرَة (
zuhra, “Venus (the planet)”). Cognate with Uzbek
Zuhra, Uyghur زوھرە (
zohre).
Zoitsa f GreekDiminutive of
Zoi, as -ίτσα
(-itsa) is a Greek feminine diminutive suffix.
Zolkhiza f BashkirDerived from Arabic ذُو الْحِجَّة
(ḏū l-ḥijja) referring to Dhul Hijjah, the twelfth month of the Islamic lunar calendar.
Zolna f Hungarian (Rare)19th-century coinage of uncertain origin and meaning. Theories include a derivation from the name of the city of
Zsolna, known by its Slovak name
Žilina in English, in north-western Slovakia.
Zolzaya f MongolianDerived from Mongolian зол
(zol) meaning "fortune, luck, blessing" and заяа
(zayaa) meaning "future, fate, destiny".
Zonda f Spanish (Latin American), Indigenous AmericanName of a specific type of fast, dry mountain wind in Argentina. The name comes from a valley in San Juan Province, Argentina. Both the valley and the wind are related to an Indigenous people
Ullum-Zonda similar to the Huarpe people.
Zonta f English (Rare)The popularity of the name is likely due to the Zonta Club (International), a women's aid association established in Buffalo, New York in 1919. ... [
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Zorah f TheatreMeaning uncertain; used very occasionally in Britain in the 20th century, probably because of the character by this name in the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera
Ruddigore, first performed in 1887; Zorah is the professional bridesmaid... [
more]
Zorigma f BuryatFrom the Buryat
зориг (zorig) meaning "courage, willpower" and the Mongolian feminine suffix
-маа (-maa). Zosma f AstronomyThe alternate name of Delta Leonis, one of the stars in the constellation Leo. Zosma means "girdle" in Ancient Greek, referring to the star's location in its constellation, on the hip of the lion.