Zubaidah, Zubayda

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  • Origin: Arabic زُبَيْدَة (Arabic)
  • Usage: Arabic-speaking world, most of the Islamic world
  • Gender: Female
  • Meaning: “little butterball.”

The name is derived from the Arabic rootز-ب- د (z-b-d), which pertains to “cream, foam, butter,” along with the Arabic feminine diminutive suffix, roughly translating to “little cream” or “little butter,” having the same sense as “cream of the crop.”

This was the sobriquet of Zubaidah bint Ja’far (766–831), the wife of Harun al-Rashid. Borne as Sukhainah or Amat al-‘Aziz, she was known for her construction of wells and reservoirs along the pilgramage routes to Mecca and is featured in The Thousand and One Nights. Her life was later the inspiration behind the character of Zobeide in the German opera Abu Hassan by Carl Maria von Weber.

The Turkish form of the name, Zübeyde, was borne by an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Sultan Ahmed II, who lived from 1728 to 1756. It was also carried by Zübeyde Hanım (1856–1923), the mother of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The name appeared in the Top 100 most popular female names in Turkey between 1980 and 1986, peaking at #70 in 1981

It is also the name of an asteroid.

Other forms include

  • Zübeydə (Azeri)
  • Zubejda (Bosnian)
  • Zobeide (German, literary)
  • Zoubida (Maghrebi Arabic)
  • Zubaida Зөбаида (Tatar)
  • Zübeyde (Turkish)
  • Zubayda (Uzbek)

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Elliw

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  • Origin: Welsh
  • Gender: feminine
  • Meaning: “colour”
  • Pronunciation, sounds kind of like Eshew

The name is derived from the Welsh lliw, meaning “colour.” The name has been in use since Medieval Times.

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Harini

  • Origin: Sanskrit हरिणी
  • Meaning: “doe; yellow; tawny; green”
  • Gender: feminine
  • Pron: HER-ee-nee

The name is from the Sanskrit हरिण (harina), which can refer to a doe as well as to a yellowish-greenish colour, such as tawny or green. It is used to refer to yellow jasmine as well as to an idol made of gold. Harini (doe) is also used to describe one of four classes of a type of woman, feminine and sweet like a doe. It is also an epithet for the goddess Lakshmi.

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Embla

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  • Origin: Old Norse
  • Meaning: unknown
  • Gender: feminine
  • EM-blah

The name appears in Norse Mythology as the name of the first woman, who has a husband named Ask. They are attested to in the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda.

The name Embla itself may derive from the Proto-Norse *elm-la (elm tree), the Proto-Norse *Ambilō (vine) or the Proto-Norse eim + la (firemaker) and it has even been connected with the Germanic root word, amal (work).

It is first attested to in Sweden in 1882, in Norway in 1900, and in Iceland after 1950, however, it may have been in use in Medieval times as well.

Between 2010 and 2016, this was among the most popular female names in Iceland. In Iceland, it peaked at #8 in 2016 . It is currently the 96th Most Popular Female Name in Norway (2023).

Sources

Võitur

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  • Origin: Estonian
  • Meaning: “anointed.
  • Gender: masculine

The name comes directly from the Estonian word võitud (anointed).

The name is currently very rare in Estonia, being given to less than 5 people.

The designated in Estonia is May 12th.

Sources

Jiva, Jivana, Jivika

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  • Origin: Sanskrit
  • Meaning: “life.”
  • Gender: feminine
  • Variant Transcriptions: Jeeva, Jeevana, Jeevika
  • Pron: (JEE-vuh; JEE-vuh-nuh; JEE-vee-kuh)

All names are derived from the Sanskrit जीवा (life).

In Hinduism and Jainism, the term jiva is used to describe the soul.

Jiva can be unisex and was borne by the 4th-century (CE) Buddhist nun and sister of King Kucha as well as a 16th-century male Hindu philosopher and saint, Jiva Goswami.

Jiva ultimately derives from the Indo-European *gʷih₃wotós, which also produced the Latin vita (life), Lithuanian gyvatà (life) and Proto-Slavic *živòtъ (life). See Živa of the same etymology.

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Glain

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  • Origin: Welsh
  • Meaning: “jewel; gem; bead.”
  • Gender: feminine
  • Pron: GLINE

The name comes directly from the Welsh word for a jewel or decorative bead. It is born by Welsh musical artist, Glain Rhys.

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Kerensa

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  • Origin: Cornish
  • Meaning: “love; charity.”
  • Gender: feminine
  • Pron: kə-REN-zə.

The name comes directly from the Welsh word for “love; charity.” It came into use in the 19th-century when an interest in reviving Cornish became popular in Cornwall.

An Anglicized spelling is Kerenza.

Hanasa

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  • Origin: Japanese
  • Kanji: 花咲
  • Katakana: ハナサ
  • Most common meaning: “flower blossom.”
  • Gender: feminine
  • Pron: HAH-nah-SAH

The name is composed of the Kanji 花 (flower) and 咲 (bloom, blossom, flourish). Other Kanji combinations are possible with different meanings.

Sources

Idalia

  • Origin: debated, various
  • Meaning: debated, various
  • Gender: feminine
  • Alternate transcriptions: Ἰδαλία
  • Pron: Eng (i-DAH-lee-ah; id-DAHL-yah); Pol (ee-DAHL-yah)

The name can have a few different origins and meanings. It does seem to appear in use in Medieval France, in this case, it may be an elaborated form of a Germanic name, perhaps related to a Frankish element, idal (unknown meaning) or the Old Norse ið, meaning “work.” Alternately, it appears in Greek mythology as an epithet for the goddess Aphrodite. In this case, the etymology is from the name of city on the island of Cyprus called Idalion, in which a temple to Aphrodite existed. The etymology of the city name itself is from the Greek Eidon helios, “I saw the sun.”

The name has had use across Europe. In Poland, it came into use in the 19th-century when Juliusz Słowacki used it as the name of a heroin in his 1866 play, Fantazy. It was thereafter used as the name of a character in the 1909 novel, Trędowata by Helena Mniszkówna.

In Poland, it has appeared in and out of the 200 most popular female names between 2010 and 2022, peaking at #172 in 2021.

In 2023, 160 girls were given this name in the United States.

Other forms/Usages

  • Idalia (Catalan, Dutch, English, German, Greek, Lithuanian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish)
  • Idalie (French)
  • Idalina (Italian)

Italian masculine forms are Idalo and Idalio.

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