Browse Submitted Names

This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and the length is 4.
gender
usage
length
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Nô En f & m Vietnamese (Rare)
Vietnamese form of Noël.
Noer f & m Indonesian
Indonesian older spelling of Nur based on Dutch orthography.
Noes f Dutch
Dutch (usually informal rather than official) short form of names containing -nous- and -noes-, such as Anouschka (and its many variant spellings, such as Anoeska) and Manouschka (and its many variant spellings, such as Manoeska).
Noey m & f Various (Rare)
Possibly derived as a diminutive of Noah 1 or Noe.
Nofa f Kurdish, Kurmanji, Yazidi
The meaning of this name is unknown at this moment in time.
Nofy m & f Malagasy
Means "dream" in Malagasy.
Nohk f & m Thai
Means "bird" in Thai.
Noia f Hebrew
Variant of Noya.
Noir m & f English (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Noir.
Noja f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Nojus, which is the Lithuanian form of Noah 1.
Noka f Japanese
From Japanese 乃 (no), a possessive particle combined with 香 (ka) meaning "fragrance". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Noko m & f Georgian (Rare)
Diminutive of given names that start with No-, such as Nodar and Noe for men and Nona 3 and Nora 1 for women.... [more]
Noks f Dutch (Rare)
Short form of Arnolda and related names, such as Arnoldina. The name might possibly be of West Frisian origin, as the one Dutch bearer of the name (a woman) that I had come across, had a surname that is most prevalent in the Dutch province of Friesland... [more]
Nola f Galician
Diminutive of Manola.
Nomi f Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare), Danish (Rare), Hebrew (Rare), English (Rare)
Scandinavian variant of Noomi as well as an English and Hebrew contracted form of Naomi 1.
Nomo f Japanese
From Japanese 野 (no) meaning "area, field" combined with 萌 (mo) meaning "sprout, bud". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Nóna f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Nona 1.
Nona f English
Short form of Winona.
Nona f Japanese
From Japanese 野 (no) meaning "area, field" combined with 菜 (na) meaning "vegetables, greens". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Nona m & f Assyrian
Nona (Syriac: ܢܥܢܐ) is an Assyrian unisex first & last name meaning "dove". The name derives from the Hebrew and Aramaic word "Yona", also meaning "dove".
Nona f East Frisian
Variant of Noena.
Nona f Breton
Variant of Non.
Nona f Romansh
Variant of Anna, traditionally found in the Lower Engadine region.
Noni f Greek
Diminutive of Pagona.
Nonn f Medieval Breton
Breton cognate of Non.
Nono f Japanese
From Japanese 埜 (no) meaning "field, plain" or 希 (no) meaning "rare, hope, beg, request, Greece" combined with 々, a phonetic character indicting a duplication of the beginning kanji... [more]
Nonô f Portuguese
Diminutive of Leonor.
Noon f Arabic (Rare)
Means "sword blade", as well as "whale".
Nopi f Greek
Diminutive of Parthena and Parthenopi.
Nora f Japanese
From Japanese 乃 (no), a possessive particle combined with 羅 (ra) meaning "lightweight fabric" or 良 (ra) meaning "good". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Nora f Greek
Diminutive of Panorea.
Norá f Sami
Sami form of Nora 1.
Norė f Lithuanian
Feminine form of Noras as well as a short form of feminine compound names that start with Nor- (such as Normantė) or end in -norė, such as Daunorė and Einorė... [more]
Nori f Dutch (Rare), English (Modern, Rare)
Diminutive of Eleanor, Eleonora, Nora 1 and other similar names with the -nor- sound.... [more]
Noro f Malagasy
Means "light, source of life" in Malagasy.
Nory f Literature, English (Rare)
Diminutive of Nora 1. It was used by Patricia Reilly Giff for the central character in her children's novel Nory Ryan's Song (2000).
Nótt f Icelandic, Norse Mythology
Means "night" in Old Norse. Nótt was the personification of the night in Norse mythology. She was the daughter of Narfi and grandmother of Thor.
Noun m & f Khmer
Novi f English (American)
Possibly a variant of Nova. Novi was given to 17 girls in 2017.
Nowi f Popular Culture
From the video game, Fire Emblem Awakening.
Noxx m & f English (Modern, Rare)
Variant of Nox or Knox
Noya f Cherokee
Means "sand" in Cherokee language.
Noza f Tajik, Uzbek
Short form of Nozanin.
Nree f & m Bengali
Nree is commonly used in the study of anthropology as it means 'human' or 'person' or in some cases, 'people'. it is of the modern Bengali language. this name is uncommon.
Ntia f Greek
Diminutive of Konstantia.
Ntui m & f Jagham, Kenyang
Derived from the Jagham and Kenyang word ntûfâm meaning "chief".
Nuan f & m Thai
Means "tender, gentle, mild, soft" or "cream, pale, ivory" in Thai.
Nüba f Chinese Mythology, Far Eastern Mythology
From a combination of the characters 女 (nü, meaning “female, woman”) and 魃 (ba, meaning “drought spirit”). This is the name of a mythological figure mentioned in the Shanhaijing (山海经), or Classic of Mountains and Seas... [more]
Nube f South American
Means "cloud" in Spanish, taken from the titles of the Virgin Mary, La Virgen de la Nube and Nuestra Señora de la Nube, meaning "The Virgin of the Cloud" and "Our Lady of the Cloud" respectively.... [more]
Nuit f English (British), Egyptian Mythology
Nuit is the Ancient Egyptian goddess of the heavens, with her name meaning "sky." Originally she was only the goddess of the night sky, but gradually she came to represent the sky in general. Nuit also protects people in the afterlife... [more]
Nuka f Georgian
Short form of feminine diminutives that end in -nuka, such as Anuka, Lenuka, Nanuka, Ninuka and Nunuka.
Nuki f Georgian
Short form of Anuki. Also compare names like Nutsiko, of which Nuki could be a contraction (more or less) in some cases.... [more]
Nula f Swahili
Variant of Nola and Nala 2.
Numo f Chinese
From the Chinese 女 (nǚ) meaning "woman, girl" and 茉 (mò) meaning "white jasmine".
Núne f & m Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Nune f Armenian
Armenian cognate of the Georgian name Nino 2.
Nune f Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Núno f & m Greenlandic
Meaning unknown.
Nûno f & m Greenlandic
Greenlandic pet name for a baby/the youngest child in the family.
Nuno f Armenian (Rare)
Diminutive of Nune and Nunufar.
Nunu f Georgian, Literature
Meaning uncertain. Georgian sources theorize that the name might be etymologically related to that of the Egyptian water god Nu and his female counterpart Naunet.... [more]
Nunu m & f Sundanese
Sundanese diminutive of names containing the sound nu (or other similar sounds), such as Nugraha or Nurhayati.
Nữ-oa f Far Eastern Mythology
Vietnamese form of Nüwa.
Nuôi m & f Vietnamese
Means "to raise, to rear" in Vietnamese.
Nuon m & f Khmer
Nuon f Khmer
Means "sweet, pleasant" or "well behaved, modest" in Khmer.
Nuqi f Arabic
Meaning "Pure" in Arabic, Nuqi Was the Sister of Lagneía,Iremía, and Kakóvoulos, and The Only Daughter and Youngest Child of Sahar 'Aswad.
Nuri f Catalan
Diminutive of Núria.
Nuri f & m Korean (Modern)
From obsolete native Korean 누리 (nuri) meaning "world," also coinciding with the word meaning "hail" and the stem of verb 누리다 (nurida) meaning "to enjoy."
Nuța f Romanian
Short form of Anuța and Lenuța.
Nuta f Sanskrit, Indian, Hindi, Hinduism, Punjabi, Bengali, Nepali, Gujarati
"praised"; "commended "
Nuți f Romanian
Diminutive of Anuța or Lenuța.
Nuya f Mordvin
Derived from Erzya нуема (nuema) meaning "harvest".
Nway f Burmese
Means "warm" in Burmese.
Nwet f Burmese
Alternate transcription of Burmese နွဲ့ (see Nwe).
Nyam m & f Mongolian
Means "Sunday" in Mongolian.
Nyke f German (Modern, Rare)
Probably a variant of Nike.... [more]
Nyna f English (Modern, Rare)
Possibly a variant of Nina 1.
Nyoe m & f Chinese (Wu)
Wu Chinese form of Yuan.
Nyok m & f Lao
Means "raise, lift" in Lao.
Nyra f English (Rare)
Possibly a variant of Nyrah.
Nyra f Guanche
Variant of Nira 4.
Nyri f English (Rare)
Anglicization of Nairi, derived from the Assyrian name for a confederation of tribes in the Armenian Highlands.
Nysa f Greek Mythology
Possibly from an archaic Greek word meaning "tree". In Greek mythology Nysa was a daughter of Aristaeus, who was believed to have brought up the infant god Dionysus, and from whom one of the many towns of the name of Nysa was believed to have derived its name.
Oajá f Sami
Meaning unknown.
Oana f Breton
Variant of Oanez.
Oánh m & f Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 瑩 (oánh) meaning "lustrous, bright, transparent".
Oanh f & m Vietnamese
From Sino-Vietnamese 鶯 (oanh) meaning "oriole".
Obai f & m Asháninka
Possibly a variant spelling of the Ashaninka obae meaning "Andean cock-of-the-rock".
Obax f Somali
It means “as delicate and beautiful as a flower” in Somali.
Obba f Frisian, Icelandic
Frisian and Icelandic feminine form of Obbe.
Obdo f Khakas
Khakas form of Eudocia.
Obey m & f English (Puritan)
Meaning, "behave in accordance with (a general principle, natural law, etc.)." Referring to fearing and obeying God.
Ocán f Romani (Caló)
Means "sun" in Caló. This name is used as the Caló form of Sol 1.
Occa f East Frisian
Variant of Okka.
Ocha m & f Pet
From Japanese ocha, a type of Japanese green tea.
Ocia f Polish
Diminutive form of Otylia.
Ocie m & f American (Rare)
Unisex name of unknown origin used primarily in the southeastern US.
Ocka f East Frisian
Variant of Okka.
Octa f English
Possible diminutive of Octavia.
Odai f Arabic
Variant transcription of Uday.
Odea f Hebrew (Rare), Jewish
Variant transliteration of אוֹדֶיָּה (see Odeya).
Odée f Flemish (Rare)
Comes from "ode", which means « song » in greek. Today this name has disappeared from France and remains very rare in flemish. The name is better known as a surname or Odéa.
Odee m & f English (Modern)
A variation of the name Odell
Odei m & f Basque Mythology, Basque (Modern)
In Basque mythology, Odei, also known as Hodei, is a spirit of thunder and the personification of storm clouds. It is now used for both men and women.
Odel f Hebrew
Hebrew form of Adel or Adele, also means "Thanks to God", which is making it relative to Odelia 2... [more]
Odem f Hebrew
Means "ruby" in Hebrew. (see Ruby), or "red". Making it relative to Adam or Shani 1... [more]
Odia f American (South), French (Acadian, Archaic), French (Quebec, Archaic), Louisiana Creole
Variant of Odéa and cognate of Odea. This name was borne by singer Odia Coates (1941–1991).
Odie m & f English
Diminutive of names such as Otis, Odell, Odessa, and Oda.
Odil f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Odile.
Ödis f Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Ødis.
Ødis f Old Swedish
Old Swedish form of Øydís.
Odna f Faroese
Faroese variant of Árna.
Odny f Norwegian
Variant of Oddny.
Odon m & f Mongolian
Means "starlit, stellar" or "medal, order" in Mongolian, ultimately from од (od) meaning "star".
Odrė f Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Audrey.
Odri f Russian, Croatian (Rare)
Variant of Audrey, reflecting the English pronunciation.
Oeke f & m West Frisian
Shorter form (even if only slightly so) of both Oelke and Oenke.
Oele m & f West Frisian (Rare)
West Frisian short form of Germanic given names that contain the element od (or aud) meaning "wealth, fortune, property" or the element odal meaning "heritage, fatherland".
Ofik f Armenian
Armenian diminutive of Ofeliya.
Ofim f Veps
Veps form of Euphemia.
Ofka f Medieval Czech, Medieval Polish
Medieval Czech and Medieval Polish diminutive of Eufemia or (less common) Sofia.
Ogdo f Evenki, Dolgan
Evenki and Dolgan form of Yevdokiya. This was borne by the Dolgan poet Ogdo Aksyonova (1936-1995).
Ogen m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Means "anchor" in Hebrew.
Ogga f American (South)
American English regional name (Appalachian) influenced by the name Olga.
Oggi f Sami
Meaning unknown.
Ogha f Hinduism
MEANING - stream, flood, flock, abundance... [more]
Ogoi f Veps
Veps form of Agatha.
Ohda f Arabic
Means "responsibility, guardianship" in Arabic.
Ohre m & f Hebrew
Variant of Or.
Oifa f Irish Mythology
Form of Aoife used in Joseph Jacobs's translation of the Irish legend the Children of Lir for the jealous third wife of Lir.
Õile f Estonian
Directly taken from Estonian õile, an archaic, nowadays poetic word for "flower".
Oile f Sami
Sami form of Oili.
Õili f Estonian
Variant of Õile.
Oivi f Finnish (Rare), Estonian (Rare)
Finnish feminine form of Oiva.
Okja f Korean
From 玉 "jade, precious stone, gem" and 子 "child"
Okka f East Frisian
Shortened form of dithematic names starting with the name element od "heritage, wealth".
Okke m & f East Frisian
Shortened form of dithematic names starting with the name element od "heritage, wealth".
Okou m & f Japanese
Means "unique" in Japanese.
Okro m & f Laz
Means gold in Laz, related to the Georgian Okropir.
Oksä f Veps
Veps form of Ksenia.
Okta f Polish
Diminutive form of Oktawia.
Okta m & f Indonesian
From the name of the month of October (Oktober in Indonesian), usually used as a given name for a child born in October.
Olar f American
Likely a variant of Ola.
Olda f West Frisian (Rare)
West Frisian name, it is a strictly feminine form of Olde. In other words, you could say that this name is the West Frisian cognate of Alda 1.
Olde m & f Dutch (Rare), West Frisian (Rare), North Frisian (Rare)
Dutch variant form of Alde and Frisian cognate of Alde. For the transition from Al- to Ol-, compare names like Walter vs... [more]
Olea f Norwegian, Swedish (Rare), Faroese
Feminine form of Ole.
Olea f Mormon
In the Book of Abraham, it is said that this is the name of the moon in the pure language.
Olef m & f Old Swedish
For masculine purposes Olef is used as a Old Swedish form of Óleifr, for feminine purposes Olef is used as a Old Swedish form of Ólæif.
Olfa f Arabic (Maghrebi)
Alternate transcription of Arabic ألفة (see Ulfa) chiefly used in Tunisia.
Òlga f Kashubian
Kashubian form of Olga.
Olgá f Sami
Sami form of Olga.
Olia f Georgian, Moldovan (Rare), Bulgarian, Russian (Rare), Ukrainian (Rare)
Georgian and Moldovan form of Olya as well as a Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian variant transcription of the name.... [more]
Olie m & f English (Rare)
Variant of Ollie.
Olin m & f Norwegian (Rare)
Feminine variant as well as masculine form of Oline.
Oliv f Norwegian (Rare)
Either a variant of Oleiv or feminine form of Oliver or Ola 1.
Òlka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Òrszula.
Olka f Polish
Diminutive of Aleksandra.
Olli m & f English (British, Modern)
Variant of Ollie, a diminutive of Oliver.
Olma f Uzbek
Means "apple" in Uzbek.
Ólǫf f Old Norse
Variant of Ólæif.
Ólof f Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Ólǫf.
Olöf f Swedish (Archaic)
Archaic Swedish form of Ólǫf. Any modern usage in Sweden today is likely a transcription error of Icelandic Ólöf.
Ol'on f Veps
Veps form of Elena.
Oløv f Norwegian (Rare, Archaic)
Variant of Olov (see Ólǫf) or perhaps a variant of Olaug. This name fell out of use in the mid 20th century, possibly due to its similarity to the Norwegian masculine name Olav and Swedish Olov.
Olov f Norwegian (Rare)
Form of Ólǫf. This name is rarely used as a female name in modern Scandinavia.
Olsa f Albanian
Feminine form of Olsi.
Olta f Medieval Romanian
Derived from the name of the river Olt (known as Aluta in Latin).
Olve f Estonian
Variant of Olvi.
Olvi f Estonian (Rare)
Short form of Olivia.
Olyu f Mari
Mari form of Olga.
Omeg m & f Greenlandic
Variant of Umik.
Omie f English (American, Archaic)
Meaning unknown, possibly a diminutive of Naomi 1.
Omoi f Japanese
From Japanese 憶 (omoi) meaning "to think, to consider, to believe", as well as other kanji which have the same pronunciation.
Ómra f Irish
Means "amber" in Irish.
Ömür f Turkish
Means "life" in Turkmen.
Omya f Nepali
Name: Omya ओम्या... [more]
Onai f Shona
Means "Look and see". This name may be given in various circumstances calling the hearer to look and see what transpired especially before and around the birth of that child
Ondi f American (Rare)
Maybe a hypochoristic form of Andrea 2.... [more]
Oneg f & m Hebrew (Rare)
Means "pleasure" in Hebrew, making it relative to Eden.
Onen f Breton
Variant of Onnenn.
Oney m & f American (Rare)
Oney is possibly of Irish (Gealic) origin as the name of a town in Ireland.
Onia f American (South, Archaic)
Diminutive of any name ending in -onia.
Onia f Arthurian Cycle
A servant of the Lady of the Lake in La Tavola Ritonda. She was married to the King of Scotland.... [more]
Onie f English (Rare), Dutch (Rare)
Possibly an obscure Anglicization of Úna and Ùna (compare Owny) or a diminutive of names containing the sound element -on-.... [more]
Onja m & f Malagasy
Means "wave" in Malagasy.
On-jo m & f Korean
From Sino-Korean 溫 (on) meaning "lukewarm, warm; tepid, mild" and 祚 (jo) meaning "throne; blessing, happiness". Other hanja combinations are also possible.
Onka f Japanese
From Japanese 恩 (on) meaning "grace, kindness, goodness, favor, mercy, blessing, benefit" combined with 花 (ka) meaning "flower". Other kanji can be used.
Onna f Frisian
Feminine form of Onno.
Onna f Romansh
Variant of Anna.
Õnne f Estonian
Derived from Estonian õnne, the genitive form of õnn, "luck; happiness", this name is a cognate of Finnish Onni.
Onon m & f Mongolian
Derived from the Onon River, which runs through Mongolia and Russia.
Önör m & f Mongolian
Means "having many children or relatives" in Mongolian.
Onpu f Japanese
It means "musical note" in Japanese.
Onri f Japanese
From Japanese 音 (on) meaning "sound" combined with 理 (ri) meaning "reason, logic". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Onsá m & f Shipibo-Conibo
Means "dangerous" in Shipibo.
Onyu f Korean
From 온 (on) meaning "all, whole, entire" and Sino-Korean 由 "cause, reason; from".
Opha f English
Diminutive of Ophelia. Opha May Johnson (1878–1955) was the first woman to have enlist in the United States Marine Corps.
Opie m & f English
Diminutive of Opal.
Opis f Roman Mythology
Variant (i.e., genitive case) of Ops.
Opri f & m Finnish
Karelian variant of Eufrosyne.
Oran m & f Hebrew (Modern, Rare)
Combination of the name Or, means "light" and the name Ran, means "singing" or "(he) sang", this name is not related to the name Oren.
Oray f Turkish
A red moon like fire... [more]
Orba f Medieval English
Late Medieval English variant of Orpah.
Orea f Greek Mythology
The name of one of the eight hamadryad daughters of Oxylos and Hamadryas, associated with the ash tree... [more]
Orhi m & f Basque
Òria f Medieval Catalan, Catalan
Variant of Àurea. It was revived in Catalonia in the 20th century.
Oria f & m Hebrew
Variant transcription of Oriya.
Orie f Japanese
From Japanese 桜 (o) meaning "cherry blossom", 莉 (ri) meaning "white jasmine" combined with 絵 (e) meaning "picture, painting, drawing, sketch". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Orin f & m Japanese (Rare)
From Rin combined with an o kanji, e.g. 緒 meaning "cord, strap," also used as an honorific version of that name, prefixed with 御/お- (o), used with regards to female names from around the Kamakura and Muromachi periods to around the 20th century.... [more]
Orin f & m Hebrew
Means "lights", from Aramaic origin.
Örke f Khakas
Means "gopher" in Khakas.
Órla f Irish
This version has The vowel elongating fada above the ó used in the Irish language
Orma f African American, English
Allegedly from a Kenyan word meaning "free men." The Orma people live in Eastern Kenya along the lower Tana River. However, this name may be a feminine form of Ormond.
Õrne f Estonian (Rare)
Derived from Estonian õrn "tender; fragile".
Oror f Armenian
Means "lullaby" in Armenian.
Orpa f Biblical German, Biblical Dutch, Dutch (Rare), Afrikaans
German, Dutch and Afrikaans form of Orpah.
Orsa f Medieval Italian
Italian form of Ursa.
Örsi f Hungarian
Feminine form of Örs.
Orsi f Hungarian
Diminutive of Orsolya.
Orta f Medieval Basque
Medieval Basque name, first documented in 1276.... [more]
Orta f Sorbian, Latvian (Rare)
Latvian and Lower Sorbian borrowing of Orte.
Orte f German (Archaic)
Short form of Dorothea (compare Orthia).
Orva f & m English (Archaic)
Originally a feminine form of Orville, but sometimes used as a masculine name, possibly influenced by Alva 2.
Orya f Hebrew (Rare)
Variant of Oriya.
Oryo f Japanese
Means "oi rice" in Japanese.
Oryx f Literature
The name of a character in Canadian author Margaret Atwood's 'Oryx and Crake' (2003).... [more]
Orzu f Uzbek
Uzbek form of Arezoo.
Osei m & f African
Ghanaian, Akan meaning of royalty
Osel m & f Tibetan
Means "bright light" in Tibetan.
Osie m & f American (Rare, Archaic)
Short form of names beginning with Os- such as Oscar or Osbert or used as an independent name.
Öski f Khakas
Means "goat" in Khakas.
Osla f Faroese, Scots (Archaic)
Faroese variant and Shetlandic Scots adoption of Ásla. As a Shetlandic name, Osla was usually Anglicized as Ursula.
O'sma f Uzbek
Derived from the name of a kohl-like plant and its dye.
Osor m & f Buryat
Means "spread of light" in Buryat.
Osor m & f Mongolian
From Tibetan འོད་ཟེར ('od zer) meaning "ray of light, radiance".
Osra f Literature
Feminine form of Osric. Used in Anthony Hope's novels The Prisoner of Zenda and The Heart of Princess Osra.
Ossa f Greek Mythology
Another name for Pheme used by Homer.
Osta f Old Swedish
Old Swedish variant of Asta.
Otha f English (American)
Feminine form of Otho.
Otie f & m English (American)
Diminutive or feminine form of Otis.
Otin f Uzbek
Uzbek feminine name meaning "female teacher", "a woman who reads mystic poetry at traditional gatherings", "an educated woman", or refering to an epithet for distinguished women.
Otje f Dutch (Archaic)
Dutch feminine form of Otto.
Otká f Czech
Diminutive form of Dorota.
Otta f Scandinavian
Feminine form of Otto, or a short form of Ottilia (perhaps modeled on the earlier Lotta)... [more]