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.
Erka f Germanic Mythology, German (Modern, Rare)
A short form derived from Old High German erkan "pure, genuine".... [more]
Erke f & m Kazakh
Means "spoiled, naughty" or "beloved" in Kazakh.
Erke m & f German (Rare)
Short version of names with Erken- such as Erkenbald or Erkenhild or version of Erik.
Erla f English (Rare), Icelandic, Faroese, Swedish (Rare), Norwegian (Rare), Danish (Rare), Estonian (Rare)
Scandinavian feminine form of Jarl (compare Erle), and an English feminine form of Earl... [more]
Erna f Silesian
Short form of Ernestyna.
Eros f Sundanese
Means "rose" in Sundanese, ultimately from Dutch roos.
Ersa f Greek Mythology
Doric Greek form of Herse, the Greek goddess of dew whose name ultimately derives from Ἑρση (herse) meaning "dew".
Ersa f Albanian
Variant of Ersi.
Erşi m & f Karachay-Balkar
Means "ugly" in Karachay-Balkar, originally intended as a protective name to ward off evil spirits. A historical bearer of the name was Ershi Kulchaeva, a member of the Central Executive Committee.
Ersi f Greek, Albanian
Modern Greek form of Herse.
Ersy f Greek
Alternate transcription of Greek Έρση (see Ersi).
Erum f Arabic, Persian, Muslim
Variant transcription of Iram
Ervá f Sami
Unknown meaning.
Erxi f & m Chinese
From the Chinese 迩 (ěr) meaning "be near, close" and 曦 (xī) meaning "sunshine, sunlight, early dawn".
Eryi f Chinese (Rare)
From the Chinese 迩 (ěr) meaning "be near, close" combined with 旖 (yǐ) meaning "romantic, charming". Other character combinations are possible.
Eryl f & m Welsh
From Welsh eryl meaning "watcher" or "lookout" (originally "hunt"), derived from ar, an intensifying prefix, and hyl "a hunt". In regular use since the 1920s, though infrequently... [more]
Erza f Kosovar, Albanian
Derived from either Albanian erza, itself is a hypocorism of erë "scent; fragrance; smell; wind", or from Albanian erza, an archaic term meaning "honor; sense of honor; honesty, fidelity".
Esah f Malay
Malay form of Aisha.
Eset f Czech
Czech form of Isis. Not generally used as a given name.
Esie f Spanish, American
Diminutive of Esperanza.
Esih f Sundanese
Derived from Sundanese asih meaning "love, affection".
Esja f Icelandic
From the name of a mountain range in Iceland, itself derived from Old Norse esja, which denoted a kind of clay. This name occurs in the Kjalnesinga saga belonging to a rich widow among Irish settlers, but her name was probably derived from that of the mountain.
Éska f Kashubian
Diminutive of Teréza via Tréska.
Eska f Frisian
Frisian short form of names that contained the Old Frisian element ēs "Æsir" (with the Æsir being members of the principal pantheon in the indigenous Germanic religion).
Eske f Frisian
Variant of Eska.
Esli f Karachay-Balkar
Means "observant" in Karachay-Balkar.
Esma f Abkhaz
Meaning unknown.
Esma f English
Variant of Esme as well as diminutive of Esmeralda.
Esme f Turkish
Turkish form of Asma.
Esmi f Estonian, Dutch (Rare)
Possibly a form of Esmé.
Eson f Uzbek
Uzbek form of Aisan.
Espe f Spanish
Diminutive of Esperanza.
Essa f Old Irish
Means "nurse" in Gaelic.
Essy f Swedish
Variant of Essi.
Esta f Faroese, Estonian
Faeroese and Estonian variant of Ester. As an Estonian name, since the 19th century Esta has been associated with Estonia, the Latin name of the country.
Este f Finnish (Rare), Estonian
Finnish diminutive of Ester and Estonian variant of Esta.
Estè f Haitian Creole (Rare)
Haitian Creole form of Esther.
Estë f Literature
Fictional character in the Lord of the Rings universe and novels.
Esti f Hebrew
Diminutive of Esther.
Esti f Estonian
Variant of Esta.
Esti f Javanese
From Javanese esthi meaning "intent, desire, wish".
Esty f Jewish
Variant of Estee.
Etha f Dutch (Rare), English (Rare, Archaic)
Dutch short form of Margaretha as well as an English short form of Ethel and in some cases also a variant spelling of Etta.... [more]
Etil f Yiddish
A Yiddish girls' name, related to the Germanic element adal meaning "Noble"
Etka f Hungarian
Originally a short form of Etelka, now used as a given name in its own right.
Etke f Yiddish
Yiddish diminutive of Esther.
Etom m & f Nigerian
Etom means "life" it is from the people of cross river state in Nigeria
Eton m & f Efik
Etra f Spanish (Rare)
Spanish form of Aethra.
Etsu f Japanese (Rare)
Means "joy, pleased, pleasure" but some parents might've went for E meaning "picture, drawing, sketch", "blessing", and in Modern times parents opted for unusual pronunciations of names such as using Ai 1 in this name... [more]
Ette f Danish (Rare)
Variant of Etta.
Etti f Hebrew
Diminutive of Esther.
Etti f & m Finnish, Swedish, Danish
A variant form of Eddie, Ettie and Etta.
Etus f Hungarian
Diminutive of Etelka.
Euis f Sundanese
Derived from Sundanese geulis meaning "pretty, beautiful".
Euli f Finnish
Diminutive of Eulaalia.
Eun-a f Korean
From Sino-Korean 恩 (eun) "kindness, mercy, charity" and 雅 (a) "elegant, graceful, refined".
Eura f American (South, Archaic)
Possibly a short form of names beginning with the element Eur-.
Eusy f German (Swiss)
Bernese German form of Elsbeth.
Evbu f Edo
This name means "misty". Misty refers to objects with misty colors. One other possibly meaning is "dew" referring to a baby born during a dewy morning.
Evey f English
Variant of Evie. Borne by the character Evey Hammond in graphic novel, "V for Vendetta", who was portrayed by Natalie Portman in the film adaption.
Evia f American (South, Archaic)
Of debated origin and meaning. Theories include a Latinization of Evie, and elaboration of Eva, a transferred use of the surname, an Anglicization of Aoife and an adoption of the Greek place name (also known as Euboea).
Evin m & f Irish
From Éimhín with the typical Irish diminutive suffix ending with the letter 'n'. From the root word eimh meaning "swift" or "lively". ... [more]
Evka f Czech
Diminutive of Eva, not used as an official given name.
Evon f English
Variant of Yvonne.
Evot f Medieval English
Diminutive of Eve.
Evra f & m Turkish, Literature, Popular Culture
In Irish author Darren Shan's Cirque Du Freak series, Evra Von is a member of the sideshow where he is displayed as a 'snake boy'.
Éwka f Kashubian
Diminutive of Éwa.
Ewka f Polish
Diminutive of Ewa.
Ewüś f Vilamovian
Diminutive of Ewa.
Exia f English (American, Archaic)
Possibly a variant of Achsia.
Exie f English
Perhaps a diminutive of Exa.
Eyba f Old Swedish
Older form of Ebba 1 as well as a short form of Old High German names beginning with eylb- (see agi).
Eyia f Old Norse
Old Norse variant of Eyja.
Eyja f Old Norse, Icelandic
Old Norse name of obscure origin, possibly from Proto-Norse *auja "good fortune, gift, (luck) giver" or *aiwa "always".... [more]
Eymi f Spanish (Latin American)
Variant of Amy, reflecting the English pronounciation.
Eyre m & f English (Modern)
Transferred use of the surname Eyre.
Eyð f Faroese
Faroese feminine name meaning "riches".
Ezel m & f Turkish, Biblical Hebrew
Unisez name. In Turkish, means "past eternity." In Hebrew, means "departure."
Ezia f Italian
Feminine form of Ezio.
Ezma f Arabic
Variant of Izma.
Ezme f English (Rare)
Variant of Esme.
E'zoz f Uzbek
Means "respect, honour" in Uzbek.
Ezri f Popular Culture
Meaning unknown. Ezri Dax is a character on the television series Deep Space Nine.
Ezzy f English
English diminutive of the Spanish name Esmeralda.
Fabi f & m Various, Portuguese
Portuguese masculine short form of Fabio and Fabiano.... [more]
Fafa f Japanese
From Japanese 花 (fa) meaning "flower" combined with 花 (fa) meaning "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Fäfe f Ubykh
Etymology unknown.
Faii f Greek
Diminutive of Sofia and Fotini.
Fain f & m English
Means happiness, and pleased.
Fair f & m English (African, Rare), English (American, Rare, Archaic)
Taken from the English word fair meaning "beautiful". This can also be taken from the surname Fair, having the same meaning.
Faïs f Medieval Occitan, Occitan (Rare)
Transferred use of the surname Faïs.
Fala f Choctaw
From Choctaw fala meaning "a crow".
Faly m & f Malagasy
Means "content, glad, happy" in Malagasy.
Fama f Roman Mythology
The Roman equivalent of Pheme. Her name is derived from Latin fama "fame; report; rumor" (ultimately from Latin fari "to speak".
Fana f Ethiopian
Means “light” or “jungle” in various African languages.
Fanh m & f Zhuang
Means "gem" in Zhuang.
Fáni f Hungarian
Hungarian short form of both Franciska and Stefánia, occasionally used as a given name in its own right.
Fani f Croatian, Slovene
Croatian and Slovene phonetic spelling of Fanny.
Fani f Spanish
Spanish diminutive of Estefanía.
Fani f Greek
Derived from the Ancient Greek word φανή (phane), both a noun meaning "torch" and an adjective meaning "bright, shining" (the feminine form of φανός (phanos)). In some cases it can be a short form of Stefania or Theofania.
Faní f Provençal
Provençal form of Fanny.
Fant f Breton (Rare)
Diminutive of Frañseza.
Fanw f Welsh
Diminutive form of Myfanwy.
Faon f & m Chinese (Wu)
Wu Chinese form of Fen 1.
Fara f Arabic, Galician (Rare)
Variant transcription of Farah.
Fara f Sicilian, Neapolitan, Italian (Tuscan)
Short form of various, now obsolete, Germanic names that contained the element -fara-, for example Burgundofara. This name is predominantly found in Sicily, Naples and, to a lesser degree, Tuscany reflecting the local veneration of Saint Fara.
Fara f Germanic
This name is derived either from Langobardic fara "family, line, kind" or Gothic faran "to travel". It can be a short form of names like Faramund and Farahild.
Fara m & f Shona
Meaning "happy" or "joyous".
Fata f Bosnian
Bosnian short form of Fatima.
Fate m & f English, English (American), English (African)
Either a direct derivation of the English word fate or a diminutive of Lafayette. The latter is what led the name to being used as a majority masculine name in the 19th and 20th centuries in the United States.
Faun f English
Variant of Fawn in the style of Fauna.
Fazu f Avar (Rare)
Possibly a form of Faiza. A known bearer was Fazu Alieva (1932-2016), a Soviet poet of Dagestani Avar origin.
Fear m & f English (Puritan)
Referring to reverance toward God. A notable bearer was Fear Brewster (1606-1634), who was one of the passengers aboard the Mayflower.
Féba f Slovak
Slovak form of Phoebe.
Feba f Russian, Bosnian (Rare), English (Rare), Croatian (Rare), Polish (Rare)
Bosnian, Russian, Croatian and Polish form of Phoebe as well as an English variant.
Fébé f Hungarian
Hungarian form of Phoebe.
Febė f Lithuanian
Lithuanian form of Phoebe.
Fede f Italian
Means "faith" in Italian, i.e. the Italian form of Fides (cf. Foy). It was borne by Italian Renaissance painter Fede Galizia (1578-1630).
Fefa f & m Portuguese
Diminutive of Fernando and Fernanda.
Feiz f Breton
Breton form of Faith.
Fela f Polish, Kashubian
Polish diminutive of Felicja and Felicyta and Kashubian diminutive of Felicjana and Felicjô.
Fele m & f German (Swiss)
Bernese German form of either Felix (masculine) or Felicitas (feminine).
Felė f Lithuanian
Diminutive form of Felicija.
Feli f & m Spanish
Diminutive of Feliciano and Feliciana.
Femi f Romani (Archaic)
Almost certainly a corruption or short form of Euphemia. This name has been in use from at least the early 1800s onward.
Femm f Dutch
Variant of Fem.
Feña f & m Spanish
Diminutive of Fernanda and Fernando.
Fēng f & m Chinese (Rare)
From Chinese "楓" (Fēng) meaning "Maple". In Japanese it can be spelled as Kaede.
Feng m & f Chinese
Means "phoenix" in Chinese.
Fenn f & m English
Unisex variant of the Dutch names Fen 2 and Fenne.
Feno m & f Malagasy
Means "full, complete" in Malagasy.
Fera f Indonesian
Possibly a variant of Farah.
Fere f & m West Frisian
Short form of Germanic names that contain the Old High German element fridu meaning "peace", such as Frederik and Frederika.
Feša f Veps
Veps form of Euphrosyne.
Fešu f Veps
Veps form of Theodora.
Fetu f Samoan
Means "star" in Samoan.
Fety m & f Malagasy
Means "festival, holiday" in Malagasy.
Feya f English (Rare)
Variant of the Scottish name Fia.... [more]
Feyi f Ewe
Means "a year has passed" in Ewe.
Fial f Irish Mythology
Means "generous, modest, honorable" in Irish. In Irish myth this was the name of Emer's elder sister, "also a goddess", whom Cúchulainn supposedly rejected because of her relations with Cairbre Nia Fer... [more]
Fiba f African
This is name for a woman born on Friday. The name may mean mild and gentle. It's derived from the Akan name Afua with the same meaning and shows contamination from the Christian name Phoebe which has a similiar pronunciation... [more]
Fibi f German (Modern, Rare)
Modern variant of Phoebe reflecting the English pronunciation.
Fida f Sardinian (Rare)
Both a borrowing of the Italian name and a short form of Vitalia.
Fida f Italian
Derived from Latin fidus "faithful, loyal; trusting, confident".
Fida f & m Arabic, Urdu, Indonesian
Means "redemption" in Arabic. It is typically only a masculine name in Pakistan while it is feminine in Indonesia.
Fida f Romansh
Contracted form of Frida 1.
Fiep f Dutch
Diminutive of Sofie or Fiebe.
Fífa f Icelandic
From Old Norse fífa meaning "cotton grass".
Fifa f Literature
Used by Danish author Lars-Henrik Olsen for a character in his novella 'Dværgen fra Normandiet' (1988; 'The Dwarf from Normandy'), in which case it was a short form of Alfífa.
Fifi f Portuguese
Diminutive of Filipa.
Fifi f Greek
Diminutive of Sofia.
Fiia f Finnish, Greenlandic
Finnish form of Fia and Greenlandic younger form of Fîa.
Fika f Bosnian
Short form of Šefika or Fikreta.
Fila m & f Romansh
Romansh short form of Filomena as well as a Romansh short form of Filip and Teofil.
Fili f Greek (Rare)
Modern Greek transcription of Phile.
Fill f Romani
Diminutive of Filomena.
Filó f Portuguese
Diminutive of Filomena.
Fina f Medieval Occitan, Occitan
Derived from Old French fin "delicate, tender".
Fina f Catalan, Spanish, Galician, Romansh
Romansh, Catalan and Spanish short form of Josefina and Galician short form of Xosefina.
Fine f German, Walloon
German short form of Josefine and Walloon short form of Djozefine, rarely used as a given name in its own right.
Fini f Spanish
Diminutive of Josefa.
Fípa f Faroese
Faroese form of Fífa.
Fiqa f Arabic
Short form of Shafiqa.
Fira f Indonesian
Possibly derived simply from the English word fire.
Fiva f Medieval Russian
Russian form of Thebe.
Five m & f English (Rare)
Old English fīf, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vijf and German fünf, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin quinque and Greek pente.
Fivi f Greek (Rare)
Alternate transcription of Greek Φοίβη (see Foivi).
Fiza f Hindi
Meaning "atmosphere".
Fizz f English (British, Rare)
Rare short form of Elizabeth, Fiona and Felicity. This is used as the name of a main character in the British children's TV show Tweenies.
Floy f English (Archaic)
Diminutive of Florence and Flora.
Flur f Judeo-Anglo-Norman
Judeo-Anglo-Norman variant of Fleur.
Főbe f Hungarian
Etymology uncertain. It may be a form of Phoebe influenced by the Hungarian meaning "main, principle".
Fodo m & f Manchu
Means "willow" in Manchu.
Fofi f Greek
Diminutive of Fotini. This was borne by Greek politician Fotini 'Fofi' Gennimata (1964-2021).
Fofo f Greek
Diminutive of Fotini.
Foix f & m Catalan
From the Catalan title of the Virgin Mary, Mare de Déu de Foix, meaning "Mother of God of Foix," the name of a church located on a cliff near the headwaters of the river Foix in the Alt Penedès municipality of Torrelles de Foix, hence the heavy concentration of its usage in the comarca of Alt Penedès.
Folt m & f East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of Folkhard or Folkhilde recorded from the 15th to 18th centuries for men and in the 16th century for women in East Frisia.
Fông m & f Chinese (Hakka)
Hakka Chinese form of Fang.
Fong m & f Chinese
another form of Foong
Fong f & m Korean
Fong m & f Thai
Means "bubble" in Thai.
Fönn f Icelandic, Norse Mythology
Means "snowdrift" in Old Norse. It occurs in Norse legend belonging to a daughter of king Snær ("snow"), sister of Drífa ("driven snow" or "snowfall"), Mjöll ("powdery (fresh) snow") and Þorri ("frozen snow").
Fouz f & m Arabic (Rare)
Means "victory, triumph" in Arabic.
Foxy f & m Popular Culture, American (Archaic)
Derived from the word foxy meaning "fox-like".
Foye m & f East Frisian (Archaic)
Variant of Focke recorded from the 15th to 17th centuries for men and in the 17th century for women in East Frisia.
Free m & f English (American)
From Middle English free, fre, freo, from Old English frēo (“free”). May also be transferred use of the surname Free.
Free m & f Dutch
Short form of Fredericus and Frederik for men and of Frederica and Frederika for women... [more]
Fria f Danish (Rare)
Variant of Frida 2; in some cases the name might be asscociated with Danish fri "free".
Frid f & m Norwegian, Swedish (Rare)
Variant of Fride, Frida 2, or any other name containing the Germanic element frid "peace"... [more]
Froe f Frisian
East Frisian variant of Frowe.
Frøy f & m Norwegian
Norwegian form of Freyr. Modern feminine usage may be interpreted as a short form of any name starting with frøy, like Frøya and Frøydis.
Fryd f Norwegian (Modern, Rare)
Either a variant of Frid or taken directly from Norwegian fryd "joy, delight".
Fuai f Chinese
From the Chinese 芙 (fú) meaning "hibiscus" and 皑 (ái) meaning "brilliant white".
Fuan f Chinese
From the Chinese 芙 (fú) meaning "hibiscus" and 安 (ān) meaning "quiet, calm, tranquil, peaceful".
Fuci f Chinese
From the Chinese 芙 (fú) meaning "hibiscus" and 慈 (cí) meaning "kind, loving, charitable, benevolent".
Fude f Japanese
This name is used as 筆 (hitsu, fude) meaning "handwriting, (painting/writing) brush," originally made up of 文 (fumi) meaning "writing(s)" and 手 (te) meaning "hand." The phrase had undergone sound shifts, first from 'fumite' to 'funde' and then from that to what is now 'fude.'... [more]
Fufu f Japanese
From Japanese 風 (fu) meaning "wind" combined with 々, a phonetic character indicting a duplication of the beginning kanji. Other kanji combinations are possible.
Fuhe f Chinese
From the Chinese 芙 (fú) meaning "hibiscus" and 荷 (hé) meaning "lotus".
Fuji f & m Japanese
From either 藤 (fuji) meaning "wisteria" or 富士 (Fuji), from the place name Fuji. Other kanji used for this name in 2-kanji combinations include 不, a phonetic kanji that is otherwise used as a negative prefix​, or 婦 meaning "woman, lady" for the first element and 志 meaning "will, aim, goal" or 治 meaning "cure; management" for the second element (二, meaning "two," is used on both, stemming from its native and Sino-Japanese readings futa(tsu) and ji).
Fuka f Japanese
From Japanese 風 (fu) meaning "wind" combined with 花 (ka) or 華 (ka) which both mean "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible. ... [more]
Fuli f Chinese
From the Chinese 馥 (fù) meaning "fragrance, aroma" and 莉 (lì) meaning "white jasmine".
Fume f & m Japanese
Comes from the Japanese word fume, meaning “beautiful”. Also a shortened version of Fumeko.
Fumu f Japanese
From Japanese 芙 (fu) meaning "lotus" combined with 夢 (mu) meaning "dream".
Funa f Japanese
From Japanese 楓 (fu) meaning "maple" combined with Japanese 奈 (na) a phonetic character. Funa Nakayama (born 2005) is an Olympic street skateboarder who won the bronze medal in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.
Fuon f Japanese
From Japanese 楓 (fu) meaning "maple" or 風 (fu) meaning "wind" combined with 音 (on) meaning "sound" or 穏 (on) meaning "stable, firm, solid, steady". Other kanji combinations are possible as well.
Fura f Icelandic
From Icelandic fura meaning "pine tree", or directly from Old Norse fura "fir tree; pine tree".
Furi f Japanese (Archaic)
振り (furi) refers to "fluttering, hanging sleeves". In the Edo period, furi were seen as fashionable, but the trend died out by the end of the 17th century.
Fūro f Japanese
Taken from 風露草 (fūrosō), the Japanese word for "geranium"; this name combines 風 (fū) meaning "wind" with 露 (ro) meaning "dew". Other kanji or kanji combinations can form this name as well... [more]
Fury f English (American, Rare)
Possibly taken from the English word fury.
Fusa f & m Japanese (Rare)
Derived from the Japanese kanji 房 (fusa) meaning "chamber; room; house" or also "bunch (of flowers); grapes (of fruit)".... [more]
Fuue f Japanese
From Japanese 楓 (fuu) meaning "maple" combined with 恵 (e) meaning "favour". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Fuwa f Japanese
From Japanese 芙 (fu) meaning "nelumbo nucifera", 歩 (fu) meaning "walk, pawn", 風 (fu) meaning "wind, influence", 楓 (fu) meaning "liquidambar formosana", 譜 (fu) meaning "musical score", 浮 (fu) meaning "to float", 冨 (fu) meaning "wealth", or 吹 (fu), the root form of 吹く (fuku) meaning "to blow" combined with 羽 (wa) meaning "feather, wing" and 和 (wa) meaning "peaceful, Japanese".
Fuyo f & m Japanese (Rare)
Variant of Fuuyou.
Fuyu f & m Japanese
From the Japanese kanji 冬 (fuyu) meaning "winter".... [more]
Fyzh' f Circassian
Means "white" in Adyghe.
Gaba f Spanish
Diminutive of Gabriella.
Gabi f Korean, Polish
in korean - Ga, combinated with "bi" (비) meaning "rain"... [more]
Gabo f English
Middle name of Milla Jovovich's daughter.
Gabs m & f Brazilian
Short form of "Gabriel" or "Gabriela"
Gada f Asturian, Romansh
Asturian and Surselvan Romansh form of Agatha.
Gael f English (Rare)
Variant of Gail.
Gaia f Late Roman
Feminine form of Gaius.
Gaia f Judeo-Spanish
Means "gay, happy" in Judeo-Spanish.
Gaid f Breton
Short form of Margaid.
Gaie f Scottish, English
Scottish variant of Gay.
Ga-in f Korean
From Sino-Korean 佳 "good, auspicious; beautiful; delightful" and 人 "man; people; mankind".
Gala f Croatian
Derived from the world gala, an old Croatian adjective meaning "black, brown".
Gala f Italian, Popular Culture
Diminutive of Galatea. The name was popularized in Italy by Gala (born Elena Ivanovna Diakonova; 1894–1982), the wife of poet Paul Éluard and later of artist Salvador Dalí.
Gale m & f English (Rare), Popular Culture
From the strong wind. This is the name of a brawler in the game 'Brawl Stars'. He has wind and snow powers, hence the name.
Gana f Jewish
Means "garden" in Hebrew.
Gaon f & m Korean (Modern)
Shortened from 가온대/가온데/가온듸 (gaondae/gaonde/gaondui), archaic variants of the word 가운데 (gaunde) meaning "centre, middle." It can also be written into hanja, combining a ga hanja, e.g. 歌 meaning "song," with an on hanja, e.g. 穩 meaning "comfortable; calm, quiet."
Gara f Japanese
From Japanese 雅 (ga) meaning "elegance" combined with 羅 (ra) meaning "lightweight fabric". Other kanji combinations are also possible.... [more]
Gara f Guanche, Spanish (Canarian)
Derived from Guanche *gar "height", and taken from place name Garajonay. According to an unattested local legend, Gara and Jonay were a pair of young Guanche lovers who died together in a joint suicide at Garajonay peak.
Gärd f Swedish
Variant of Gerd 2.
Gáre f Sami
Sami form of Kari 1.
Gari m & f English
Variant of Gary also used as a feminine form.
Gata f Kashubian
Diminutive of Jagata and Agata.
Gaud f Breton
Diminutive of Margod.
Gåva f Swedish (Rare)
Directly taken from Swedish gåva "gift".
Gavi m & f Hebrew
Short form of Gavriel or Gavrielle.
Gawa m & f Tibetan
Means "happy" in Tibetan.
Gaya f Judeo-Spanish
Means "gay, happy" in Judeo-Spanish.
Gaya f Medieval Arabic (Moorish)
Means "end, goal" in Arabic.
Gaya f Hebrew
Hebrew form of Gaia.
Gayl f & m English (Rare)
Variant of Gayle.
Gayu f Indian
Origin - Sanskrit, Hindi, Indian, Tamil, Telugu, Nepali, Sinhala, Bengali, Sikh, Buddhist, Sindhi, Urdu, Mauritian, Fijian, Malayalam, Assamese, Oriya ... [more]
Gazî f Kurdish
Means "appeal, call for help" in Kurdish.
Geda f Romansh
Variant of Gada, traditionally found in central Grisons.