Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the ending sequence is a or ah; and the length is 5.
gender
usage
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length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Dehua f Chinese
From the Chinese 德 (dé) meaning "heart, mind, morals, ethics, virtue" and 花 (huā) meaning "flower".
Deina f Basque (Hispanicized, ?), Spanish (?)
Allegedly a Hispanicized form of Deiñe.
Deita f Romansh
Romansh short form of Margareta, traditionally found in the Surselva region.
Dejah f Literature, Popular Culture, American
Dejah Thoris is the name of a fictional character and princess of the Martian city-state/empire of Helium on the planet Barsoom (Mars) in American author Edgar Rice Burroughs's series of Martian novels (the first of which was published in 1912)... [more]
Dēkla f Baltic Mythology, Latvian (Rare)
Dēkla is a Latvian goddess of fate and the sister of the goddesses Laima and Kārta. In old Latvian folk songs Laima and Dēkla are often considered one and the same goddess and their names are used interchangeably... [more]
Dekla f Estonian (Rare)
Estonian borrowing of Dēkla.
Delfa f Polish
Diminutive form of Delfina.
Dèlia f Catalan
Catalan form of Delia 1.
Délka f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adélka.
Demna m Georgian
Diminutive of Demetre, which is now also used as an independent name.... [more]
Denča f Czech
Diminutive form of Denisa.
Denia f Romanian (Rare), Moldovan (Rare)
Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include a contracted form of Denisa and a derivation from denie (indefinite form). The denia (definite form) is a Matins, or vigil, which takes place in the evening in the fifth week of Lent... [more]
Denia f Greek
Diminutive of Dionysia.
Denia f American (South, Archaic)
Short form of names ending in -denia, such as Adenia and Modenia. In some cases, however, it was also an elaboration of Dena.
Denna f English, Literature
The name of a character from the book series The Sword of Truth written by Terry Goodkind.
Denya f English
Likely a variant of Denia.
Denya m Russian
Diminutive of Denis.
Deria f Kurdish
Means “the sea” in Kurdish.
Derwa f Cornish, History (Ecclesiastical)
Likely derived from Cornish derow "oak trees" (ultimately from Proto-Celtic *daru "tree"). Saint Derwa is the patron saint of Menadarva (Merther Derwa in Cornish, translating to grave of St Derwa in English) in the parish of Camborne, Cornwall... [more]
Derýa f Turkmen
Turkmen form of Derya
Desha f Russian
Variant of Desa.
Desna f English (Rare)
Appeared in the 1940s and then disappeared again. The equally mysterious Desne is found in the late 1930s and survived until the early 1950s. Desney also occurred in the 1940s and '50s... [more]
Dessa f Obscure
Diminutive of Odessa, Desiree or other names containing des.
Detra f English
Variant of Deitra.
Detta f German (Swiss), Romansh
Romansh short form of Margaretha, traditionally found in the Engadine valley.
Devya f Dogri
Means "God's gift" in Dogri.
Dexia f Chinese
From the Chinese 德 (dé) meaning "heart, mind, morals, ethics, virtue" and 霞 (xiá) meaning "rosy clouds".
Deyla f English
Variant of Dayla.
Deyna f English
Variant of Dana 2.
Dhafa m Indonesian
Variant of Daffa.
Dhana f Medieval Arabic (Moorish)
Meaning "smallness".
Dhana m & f Indian, Tamil, Kannada, Indonesian
Derived from Sanskrit धन्य (dhanya) meaning "bestowing wealth, rich".
Dhana f Obscure
Possibly a variant of Dana 1. This name was brought to limited public attention in 1964, when a character in the film 'The 7th Dawn' was named Dhana.
Dhara f Indian
In Sanskrit it means Earth and is pronounced as Dh.ra
Dheva m & f Indonesian
Variant of Deva.
Dhora f Filipino
Likely a variant of Dora.
Díana f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Diana.
Diaya f Ilocano, Filipino
From Ilocano diaya meaning "gift, gift giving, offering".
Dibya f & m Indian, Bengali, Nepali
Bengali and Nepali form of Divya.
Didra f Hungarian
Cogane of Deirdre, meaning "daughter".
Diera m & f Malagasy
Means "deer" in Malagasy.
Diijá m Sami
Short form of Ánddijá.
Diksa m & f African
MEANING "PLAY", USED BY THE YUNGUR PEOPLE OF THE ADAMAWA HIGHLANDS IN NORTH EASTERN NIGERIA.NIGERIA.
Dilah f Indonesian, Malaysian
Possibly a variant of Dila.
Dilga f Indigenous Australian Mythology
The earth goddess of the Karadjeri of northwestern Australia.
Dilia f Limburgish
Limburgish short form of Odilia.
Dilia f Italian
Truncated form of Edilia.
Diljá f Icelandic
Icelandic form of Delia 1.
Dilla f Indonesian
Possibly a variant of Dila.
Dilma f Portuguese (Brazilian)
Possibly a form of Delma. This name is borne by Brazilian president-elect Dilma Rousseff.
Dilşa f Kurdish
Means "cheerful" in Kurdish.
Dilva f Kurdish
Means "from the heart" in Kurdish, derived from dil meaning "heart".
Dinda f Indonesian
Short form of Adinda.
Dinha f Portuguese
Diminutive of Claudia.
Dinja f Dutch
A variant form of Dina 1 or Dina 2. The Dutch name Dina comes most often from shortening feminine names ending in -dina (like Bernhardina or Arendina); it is also the Dutch form of the Biblical name Dinah.... [more]
Dinka f Croatian
Croatian feminine form of Dinko.
Diona f Greek Mythology (Latinized), Albanian
Latinization of Dione 1 as well as the Albanian form of the name.
Diona f English, Albanian
Feminine form of Dion. In some of the American cases, it may also be a variant of Diana.
Diora f English
Feminine form of Dior. A known bearer of this name is American actress Diora Baird.
Diosa f Spanish, Filipino
Means "goddess" in Spanish.
Disma m Italian (Rare)
Italian form of Δυσμάς (Dysmas) (see Dismas).
Disya m & f Russian
Diminutive of Denis or Diana.
Ditka f Kashubian, Slovene
Kashubian short form of Editka and Slovene diminutive of Dita.
Ditta f Italian, Hungarian
Truncated form of Editta as well as a Hungarian short form of Edit and Judit, used as a given name in its own right.
Diuša f Czech, Slovak
Czech and Slovak diminutive of Diana. Also compare Diuška.
Diyaa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic ضياء (see Ziya).
Diyah f Javanese
Variant of Dyah.
Djama m Manding
Means “the crowd” in Bambara.
Djina f Haitian Creole
A Haitian Creole variant of Gina reflecting an echo of W. and central African phonetic patterns and French linguistic influences.
Djoja f Bosnian (Archaic)
Possibly a cognate of Gaya. Alternatively, it could be derived from the Spanish word joya, meaning "jewel".
Djuna f American
Variant of Juna.
Dlyla f English (American, Rare)
Possibly a spelling variation of Delilah.
Dobra f Bulgarian, Medieval Polish, Yiddish
Derived from the Slavic element dobru "good".... [more]
Doffá m Sami
Sami form of Kristoffer.
Dohna f African American
Feminine form of Dohn
Dokka m Chechen
From Chechen доккха (dokqa) meaning "big, large".
Dolfa f Kashubian
Truncated form of Adolfa.
Dolma f Tibetan, Bhutanese, Buddhism
From Tibetan སྒྲོལ་མ (sgrol-ma) meaning "saviouress" (referring to enlightenment), derived from སྒྲོལ (sgrol) meaning "to liberate, to save" and the feminine particle མ (ma)... [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.
Domka f Croatian, Slovene
Either from the noun dom meaning ‘'home'’ or a short form of Dominika.
Dommá m Sami
Sami form of Thomas.
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.
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.
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.
Dorea f Literature, Dutch (Rare), German (Rare)
The name of one of the "sand snakes" in 'A Song of Ice and Fire' by George R. R. Martin.
Dorja f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene short form of Doroteja.
Dorkȧ f Vilamovian
Vilamovian form of Dorothy.
Dorla f English (Modern)
A combination of Dora and Darla.
Dorra f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Dorra Ibrahim Zarrouk (born January 13, 1980) is a Tunisian actress living in Egypt.
Dorsa f Persian
Means "pearl-like" in Persian.
Dorta f Swedish (Archaic)
Contracted form of Doreta (see also Dorthe and Dörthe).
Dosma f Batak
From Toba Batak dos meaning "same, similar, in kind" and the suffix -ma indicating emphasis.
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.
Douaa f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic دعاء (see Dua) chiefly used in North Africa.
Douja f Arabic
Sometimes used as a nickname for “Khadija”. Meaning: “the darkness of night”
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.
Draca m Anglo-Saxon
Old English byname (and, less frequently, given name) meaning "snake" or "dragon", derived from Latin draco "snake, monster" (see Draco), applied to someone with a fierce or fiery temperament.
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.
Driva f Swedish (Rare)
Swedish form of Drífa.
Drora f Hebrew
Feminine form of Dror.
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.
Dubra f Galician (Modern, Rare)
Transferred use of the name of the river Dubra in the province of A Coruña in Galicia, itself from Proto-Celtic dubros "water".
Dubya m English
Nickname given to the former U.S. president George W. Bush (1946-) after the colloquial pronunciation of his middle initial.
Duela f Popular Culture
Duela Dent is the Joker's daughter in DC comics.
Dukpa m & f Tibetan, Bhutanese
From Tibetan འབྲུག་པ ('brug-pa) meaning "Bhutanese (person)", also referring to a school of Tibetan Buddhism (the Drukpa Kagyu).
Dulia f Asturian, Galician
Short form of Odulia.
Dulma f Buryat
Buryat form of Dolma.
Dulza f Aragonese (Archaic)
Aragonese form of Dulce.
Dumah m Biblical, Judeo-Christian-Islamic Legend
Means "silent" in Hebrew. Briefly mentioned in the Old Testament as the name of one of Ishmael's sons. In Rabbinical Literature, Dumah is also the angel of silence and of the stillness of death.
Dumka m Santali, Ho
Possibly derived from Dumka: a city in Bihar, India.
Dunea f Moldovan (Rare)
Moldovan form of Dunya.
Dunia f & m Arabic, Swahili, Spanish, Galician
Derived from Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā) "world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)".
Dünýä f Turkmen
Turkmen form of Dunya.
Dünya f Turkish, Azerbaijani
Turkish form of Dunia.
Duojá f Sami
Meaning unknown.
Duová f Sami
Sami form of Tove and Tuovi.
Durna f Azerbaijani
Derived from Azerbaijani durna "crane (bird)", ultimately from Proto-Turkic *durunja. The crane is sometimes seen as a symbol of peace.
Durza m Literature
Used by author Christopher Paolini (1983-) as the name of an antagonist in his Inheritance trilogy. The character Durza is a Shade, i.e., a sorcerer possessed by demonic spirits; born Carsaib, he was transformed into a Shade when he summoned spirits too powerful to control, which then took possession of his mind and body... [more]
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.
Dusya f Russian, Ukrainian
Diminutive of Yevdokiya.
Duttá m Sami
Possibly derived from Sami duttat "to be content, satisfied".
Duvká m Sami
Sami form of Tuukka.
Dwora f Jewish (Polonized)
Polonized spelling of Dvorah.
Dwura f Assyrian
Assyrian form of Deborah. It also means "bee" in Assyrian.
Dyana f English
Variant of Diana.
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.
Dysia f Polish
Diminutive of Edyta.
Dytka f Polish
Diminutive of Judyta via Judytka.
Dyzia f Polish
Diminutive of Dioniza.
Dyzma m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Δυσμάς (Dysmas) (see Dismas). Known bearers of this name include the Polish poet, writer and playwright Dyzma Bończa-Tomaszewski (1749-1825) and the Polish sociologist and politician Dyzma Gałaj (1915-2000).
Dzera f Digor Ossetian, Ossetian
Means "bird of prey" in Ossetian. It is also a diminutive of Dzerassa.
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.
Dzuwa m & f Chewa
Means "sunshine" in Chewa.
Eabha f Irish
Variant of Éabha.
Eadda f American (Rare, Archaic)
Derived from the Old English element ead meaning "rich, blessed".
Eadka f English (American)
Possibly an elaboration or diminutive of Eada.
Ealga f Irish (Rare)
Means "noble, brave", taken from the Irish Inis Ealga "Noble Isle", which was a poetic name for Ireland.
Ealjá m Sami
Meaning unknown.
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
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]
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.
Edmea f Italian, Maltese
Italian cognate of Edmée.
Edona f Albanian
Feminine form of Edon.
Edora f English
Variant of Eudora.
Eduna m Georgian (Rare)
Diminutive of Eduard and its short forms Edo and Edu, as it contains the Georgian diminutive suffix -უნა (-una).
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]
Edzia f Polish
Diminutive of Edyta.
Eedla f Finnish
Finnish variant of Edla, rarer than the original form.
Eesha f Sanskrit
Eesha is a feminine name of Sanskrit origin that means "wish, desire, divine, regal, supreme, pure, life, alive".
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.
Efosa m Yoruba
meaning "God's Well" and is of Beninese origin
Egica m Gothic
Egica (c. 610 – 701x703), was the Visigoth King of Hispania and Septimania from 687 until his death. He was the son of Ariberga and the brother-in-law of Wamba.
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).
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.
Eigra f Welsh (Rare)
Probably a variant of Eigr. This is borne by the Welsh writer Eigra Lewis Roberts (1939-).
Èinsa f Emilian-Romagnol
Emilian form of Enza. The name coincides with the name of the river Èinsa.
Eiria f English
Possibly a transferred use of the surname Eiria.... [more]
Eisha m & f English
Possibly a variant of Aisha.
Eisha f Sanskrit
Variant of Esha.
Eisia m & f Scottish
This name was found etched onto a silver vessel in East Lothian, Scotland. It was accompanied by the names Bri, Camulogeni, Con and Frymiacus. Its meaning is unknown and whether the name was Eisia alone or Eisia with something else following it is also unknown as it was barley legible.
Eissa m Arabic
Alternate transcription of Arabic عيسى (see Isa 1).
Ejiga m African
Ejiga is an igala name from kogi state of in the central region of nigeria
Ejita f Sanskrit
MEANING - to shine... [more]
Ēkara f & m Maori
Means "eagle" in Maori.
Ekeka f Hawaiian
Variant of Ekika.
Ekeka m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Edgar.
Ekela f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Ethel.
Ekena f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Edna.
Ekika f Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Edith.
Ekuna f Georgian
Diminutive of Ekaterine and its short forms Eka 2 and Eko, as it contains the Georgian diminutive suffix -უნა (-una).
Elaïa f Basque (Gallicized)
Gallicized form of Elaia.
Elämä m & f Finnish
Means "life" in Finnish.
Elana f English, Jewish
Feminine form of Elan.
Elara f Breton
Feminine form of Elar.
Elaya m Judeo-Anglo-Norman
Judeo-Anglo-Norman form of Eliya.
Elbmá f Sami
Sami form of Elma.
Elcia f Polish
Diminutive of Elżbieta.
Eleka f American
Maybe a feminine form to Elek.
Elema m Hawaiian
Hawaiian form of Elmer.
Elema f Judeo-Anglo-Norman
Judeo-Anglo-Norman variant of Elena.
Éléna f French
French borrowing of Elena.
Eléna f French
French form of Elena.
Elexa f English (Rare)
Feminine form of Elex.