This is a list of submitted names in which the gender is feminine; and a substring is a.
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Tresna m & f SundaneseMeans "love, affection" in Sundanese, ultimately from Sanskrit तृष्णा
(tṛ́ṣṇā).
Trichat f & m ThaiFrom Thai ตรี (
tri) meaning "three" and ชาติ (
chat) meaning "life, birth, origin, existence".
Trillian f LiteratureUsed in Douglas Adams's 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.' In the story, Trillian is an elided form of her full name, Tricia McMillan.
Trinbago m & f CaribbeanCombination name derived from the Caribbean islands Trinidad & Tobago.
Triphina f Breton, HistoryAllegedly from
Trifin, a Welsh name derived from
triw "exact, precise". This was the name of a 6th-century Breton saint, wife of the tyrant Conomor who killed their young son Tremorus.
Trisana f LiteratureName of one of the main characters in Tamora Pierce's Circle of Magic series.
Trisnawati f IndonesianDerived from Javanese
trisna meaning "love" combined with the feminine suffix
-wati.
Tristessa f Literature, Popular CultureUsed by the 20th-century writer Jack Kerouac for the title character in his short novel 'Tristessa' (1960), in which case it was intended to be an Anglicization of the Spanish word
tristeza meaning "sadness" (from Latin
tristis; compare
Tristan)... [
more]
Trivia f Roman MythologyDerived from Latin
trivium meaning "a place where three roads meet, a crossroads". In Roman mythology this was the name of a goddess of the night and crossroads, usually associated with witchcraft and sorcery as well as ghosts and childbirth... [
more]
Trofimena f Italian (Rare)This given name is best known for being the name of the 7th-century saint Trofimena, who was born and raised on the island of Sicily. During her lifetime, Sicily was a province of the Byzantine Empire, where Greek was the primary language... [
more]
Troja f SerbianFrom Serbian
троје (troje) meaning "three people" thus denoting a "trinity". "Trinity" in Serbian is
тројство (trojstvo), itself from
троје (troje).
Tronda f NorwegianFemale form of
Trond or from the place name Trondheim. The father of the first girl named Tronda came from Trondheim.
Trotula f Medieval ItalianTrota, also known as Trotula, of Salerno was an Italian physician from Salerno who lived in the early 12th century. She wrote or contributed to "De curis mulierum," a book on women's health and treatments... [
more]
Truella f LiteratureCombination of the word "true" and the popular suffix -ella. This is the name of a character in L. Frank Baum's novel ''The Magical Monarch of Mo'' (1900).
Truganini f Indigenous AustralianMeans "grey saltbush" (scientific name: Atriplex cinerea) in
Palawa. Truganini is believed to have been the last "full-blood" Palawa (Tasmanian Aboriginal) woman; she died in 1876.
Trugernanner f Indigenous TasmanianMeaning unknown. This was the name of Trugernanner (often referred to as Truganini), who was the last full-blooded Tasmanian Aboriginal, dying in 1876.
Tsagaan-arslan m & f MongolianMeans "white lion" in Mongolian. It can refer to a legendary white lion or white antelope.
Tsagaanchuluu m & f MongolianMeans "white stone" in Mongolian, from цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white" and чулуу
(chuluu) meaning "rock, stone".
Tsagaandalai f & m MongolianMeans "white sea" in Mongolian, from цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white" and далай
(dalai) meaning "ocean, sea".
Tsagaandorzh m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white, fair" and дорж
(dorj) meaning "diamond, vajra", deriving from Tibetan རྡོ་རྗེ
(rdo rje) (see
Dorji).
Tsagaankhüü m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white, fair" and хүү
(khüü) meaning "son, boy" or "dear, beloved".
Tsagaansar f MongolianMeans "white moon" in Mongolian, from цагаан
(tsagaan) meaning "white" and сар
(sar) meaning "moon". This is the name of the Mongolian Lunar New Year, usually celebrated around the beginning of spring.
Tsaina m & f MalagasyMeans "mind, intellect" or "flag, banner" in Malagasy.
Tsakani f & m South African, TsongaThe meaning is "to be happy". It was popularized by Tsakani Mhinga. She was a South African singer who died in 2006.... [
more]
Tsamchoe f TibetanMeans "cessation, termination, stop, end (as in stopping evil spirits)" in Tibetan.
Tsampika f GreekPossibly from Greek τσαμπίκα
(tsampíka) or τσαμπέκα
(tsampéka) referring to a musical instrument and type of ship, or from τσάμπα
(tsámpa) meaning "fire, spark".
Tsangchung m & f TibetanDerived from the Tibetan
ཆུང (tsang) meaning "complete, entire" and
ཆུང (chung) meaning "little".
Tsao m & f ChineseThe traditional form of the mandarin Cao. Tsao is commonly used in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Tsaraleha m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
leha meaning "movement".
Tsaramandresy m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
mandresy meaning "conquer", or the Malagasy name for the Ficus grevei tree.
Tsarasata m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsara meaning "good, beautiful" and
sata meaning "habit, custom".
Tsasanshuurga m & f MongolianMeans "snowstorm, blizzard" in Mongolian, from цас
(tsas) meaning "snow" and шуурга
(shuurga) meaning "storm".
Tsasantsetseg f MongolianMeans "snowdrop (plant)" in Mongolian, ultimately from цасан
(tsasan) meaning "snowy" and цэцэг
(tsetseg) meaning "flower".
Tsaschikher m & f MongolianPossibly from Mongolian цас
(tsas) meaning "snow" and чихэр
(chikher) meaning "sweet, sugar, candy".
Tselha f & m TibetanTselha is a unisex name of Tibetan origin. It's comprised of ཚེ (tshe) meaning "life" and ལྷ (lha) meaning "god/dess."
Tsengelmaa f MongolianFrom Mongolian цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "feast, merrymaking, happiness" and the feminine suffix маа
(maa).
Tsengelsaikhan f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian цэнгэл
(tsengel) meaning "feast, merrymaking, gaiety" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".
Tsepak m & f Buddhism, TibetanFrom Tibetan ཚེ་དཔག
(tshe-dpag) meaning "immeasurable life, boundless life", derived from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and དཔག
(dpag) meaning "measure, limit"... [
more]
Tserenbal m & f MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" combined with бал
(bal) meaning "honey".
Tserenbayar m & f MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" and Mongolian баяр
(bayar) meaning "celebration, joy".
Tserenkhand f MongolianDerived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང
(tshe ring) meaning "long life, longevity" and ханд
(khand) meaning "extract, infusion, tea".
Tserenlkham f MongolianFrom given name
Tseren, ultimately derived from Tibetan ཚེ་རིང (
tshe ring) meaning "long life" and
Lkham derived from Tibetan ལྷ་མོ (
Lhamo) meaning "goddess"
Tsetsegkhand f MongolianMeans "flower infusion, flower extract, flower tea" in Mongolian, from цэцэг
(tsetseg) meaning "flower" and ханд
(khand) meaning "infusion, extract, tincture".
Tsetsegmaa f MongolianDerived from Mongolian цэцэг
(tsetseg) meaning "flower" combined with the suffix -маа
(maa) commonly added to feminine names.
Tsetsenbayar m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "wise, intelligent, profound" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "joy, celebration".
Tsetsenzhargal f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian цэцэн
(tsetsen) meaning "wise, intelligent, profound" and жаргал
(jargal) meaning "happiness, blessing".
Tseyang f TibetanFrom Tibetan
ཚེ (
tshe) "life" and either
དབྱངས (
dbyangs) "song, voice" or
གཡང (
gyang) "happiness, blessing, prosperity".
Tsezarina f BulgarianBulgarian feminine name of possible modern coinage and unknown etymology. It may be ultimately taken from the name
Caesar.
Tshala f LubaMeaning unknown. It comes from the Tshiluba language, spoken in DR Congo.
Tshela m & f Central AfricanWestern Luba unisex name derived from the phrase
cyela makàsà meaning "enfant born feet first".
Tshewang m & f Tibetan, BhutaneseFrom Tibetan ཚེ་དབང
(tshe-dbang) meaning "powerful life, power of a long life", from ཚེ
(tshe) meaning "life" and དབང
(dbang) "power".
Tshiandanda m & f LubaThis name is given by Luba people when the newborn has at least four older siblings of the opposite gender.
Tsiafoy m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
afoy meaning "abandoned, forsaken".
Tsiala f GeorgianDerived from the Georgian adjective ციალა
(tsiala) meaning "shimmering".
Tsianina f Creek (?), Cherokee (?)Meaning unknown. A noted bearer is Tsianina Redfeather Blackstone (December 13, 1882 – January 10, 1985), a Creek/Cherokee singer and performer.
Tsiferana m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
ferana meaning "limited, restrained".
Tsihala m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
hala meaning "hated, abhorred".
Tsikiaina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsiky meaning "smile" and
aina meaning "life".
Tsilavina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
lavina meaning "refused, rejected, denied".
Tsirapa f AsháninkaFrom the Ashaninka name for a species of large-leafed palm tree.
Tsirava m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
rava meaning "ruined, destroyed".
Tsirihanitra m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsiry meaning "bud, shoot" and
hanitra meaning "good odour, fragrance, perfume".
Tsirompisama f & m AsháninkaEtymology uncertain, allegedly the name of a type of plant and possibly from the Ashaninka
tsirompi meaning "orchid".
Tsismara f Georgian (Rare)Derived from Georgian ცისმარა
(tsismara) or ცისმარე
(tsismare) meaning "long, lifelong". Also compare the related Georgian adjective ცისამარა
(tsisamara), which roughly means "single day, whole day".... [
more]
Tsisnami f GeorgianDerived from Georgian ცის ნამი
(tsis nami) meaning "dew of the sky". It consists of Georgian ცის
(tsis) meaning "of the sky" and Georgian ნამი
(nami) meaning "dew" (see
Nami).
Tsitseka f Greek (Rare, ?)A form of
Tzitzak or
Çiçek. Empress Tzitzak was an 8th-century Khazar princess who converted to Christianity and was baptized
Irene upon marrying the Byzantine emperor Constantine V.
Tsi-Zak-Gay f Indigenous American, SnohomishOf uncertain etymology. Name borne by a Snohomish woman known for her skill in basket-weaving, and for introducing basket-weaving to the Snohomish people.
Tsizaraina m & f MalagasyFrom the Malagasy
tsy meaning "not" and
zaraina meaning "divided".
Tsobako f AsháninkaEtymology uncertain, perhaps from the Ashaninka
tsobo meaning "owl".
Tsogbayar m & f MongolianDerived from цог
(tsog) meaning "embers, glowing coals" or "splendour, glory" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "joy, happiness".
Tsoghanush f ArmenianFrom the Armenian
ցող (cʿoł) meaning "dew" and
անուշ (anush) meaning "sweet".
Tsogmaa f MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and the feminine suffix маа
(maa).
Tsogtsaikhan m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цогт
(tsogt) meaning "spirited, ardent" and сайхан
(saikhan) meaning "nice, beautiful, handsome".
Tsogzayaa f & m MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and заяа
(zayaa) meaning "future, fortune, fate".
Tsokala f Georgian (Archaic)Derived from Old Georgian ცხო
(tskho) meaning "other, foreign" and Old Georgian ქალი
(kali) meaning "woman, wife". The literal meaning of this name is thus "foreign woman", but its figurative meaning is the actual intended meaning... [
more]
Tsolmonbayar m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цолмон
(tsolmon) meaning "Venus, morning star" and баяр
(bayar) meaning "celebration, joy".
Tsolmontuyaa f MongolianFrom Mongolian цолмон
(tsolmon) meaning "Venus, morning star" and уяа
(tuyaa) meaning "ray, beam (of light)".
Tsovinar f Armenian, Armenian MythologyMeans "siren" from the Armenian word Ծովինար
(tsovinar), ultimately linked to the word ծով
(tsov) meaning "sea". Tsovinar was the Armenian goddess of rain, water and the sea.
Tsozhavkhlan m & f MongolianFrom Mongolian цог
(tsog) meaning "energy, ember, glowing coals" or "glory, splendour" and жавхлан
(javklan) meaning "dignity, majesty".
Tsubakiko f Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 椿 (
tsubaki) meaning "camellia flower" combined with 子 (
ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsubasako f Japanese (Rare)From Japanese 翼 (
tsubasa) meaning "wing" combined with 子 (
ko) meaning "child". Other combinations of kanji characters can also form this name.
Tsubura f & m JapaneseThis name can be used as 円 (en, mado, mado.ka, maru, maru.i, maro.yaka,
tsubura) meaning "circle, round" or it can be combined with 良 (ryou, i.i, yo.i,
ra) meaning "good." As a word, it (円ら) refers to something round and cute, especially the eyes.... [
more]
Tsudzuna f JapaneseFrom Japanese 月 (
tsu) meaning "moon" duplicated and combined with 奈 (
na) meaning "apple tree". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsuka f JapaneseFrom Japanese 摘 (
tsu) meaning "to pluck; to pick" combined with 花 (
ka) meaning "flower". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsukako f Japanese (Rare, ?)From 津 (
tsu) meaning "port, harbor", 香 (
ka) meaning "fragrance" or 加 (
ka) meaning "increase, add" with 子 (
ko, shi) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Tsukane f & m Japanese (Rare)This name is used as 束 (soku, taba, taba.neru, tsuka, tsuka.neru,
tsukane) meaning "bundle."... [
more]
Tsukia f JapaneseFrom Japanese 月 (tsuki) meaning "moon" combined with 愛 (a) meaning "love, affection". Other kanji combinations can also form this name.
Tsukika f JapaneseFrom Japanese 月 (
tsuki) meaning "moon" combined with 樺 (
ka) meaning "birch, reddish yellow" or 嘉 (
ka) meaning "praise, auspicious". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsukiya f & m JapaneseFrom Japanese 月 (
tsuki) meaning "moon" combined with 夜 (
ya) meaning "night". Other kanji combinations are possible.
Tsuna f JapaneseFrom 絆 (
tsuna) meaning "tether, tie, link, bond, fetter, connection" or 繫 (
tsuna) meaning "connect, attach". Other kanji or kanji combinations are possible.
Tsunade f Japanese Mythology, Popular CultureThis is the name of Jiraiya's wife from the Japanese folktale 'Jiraiya Gōketsu Monogatari'. The character from 'Naruto' is named after her. The word 綱手 (
tsunade) means "mooring rope"; it comes from 綱 (
tsuna) meaning "cable, rope, genus, class" and 手 (
de) meaning "hand".
Tsunako f JapaneseFrom 鶴 (
tsu) meaning "crane (bird)", 菜 (
na) meaning "vegetable, greens", and 子 (
ko) meaning "child". Other kanji combinations can be used.
Tsunami f & m VariousFrom Japanese 津波
(tsunami) meaning "a tsunami, a tidal wave", which is a compound 津
(tsu) meaning "harbor" and 波
(nami) meaning "wave". Other kanji or kanji combinations can form this name as well.