10,000+ Girl Names That End in A

  1. Genoa
    • Origin:

      Italian place-name
    • Description:

      One of the newer geographical site names, it has the advantage of sounding like a real girl's name because of its jen beginning and feminine a ending.
  2. Delya
    • Hava
      • Origin:

        Modern variation of Eve
      • Description:

        Hava is an anglicization of the Hebrew name Chava, which, like its English form Eve, means "life". In some accents, it may sound like "have a", so it's worth considering if this will be an issue combined with a last name. But overall, it's an elegantly simple name with a great meaning.
    • Elouera
      • Origin:

        Australian Aboriginal
      • Meaning:

        "a pleasant place"
      • Description:

        Elouera has potential for people looking for unusual versions of popular "Elle" names like Ellen, Eleanor and Ella. This Aboriginal Australian place name is filled with the mellifluous sounds that are in style at the moment
    • Adwoa
      • Origin:

        Akan, Ghanaian
      • Meaning:

        "born on Monday"
      • Description:

        Adwoa is a given name used for women born on Monday in Western Africa, particularly Ghana and some parts of Togo and Ivory Coast. The male equivalent is Kwadwo.
    • Darva
      • Origin:

        Slavic
      • Meaning:

        "honeybee"
      • Description:

        The first bride on "Who Wants to Marry a Millionaire." -- not the classiest of names.
    • Zinaida
      • Origin:

        Russian, from Greek, related to Zeus
      • Description:

        This unusual name belonged to a character played by Kirsten Dunst in an early film.
    • Laurenza
      • Origin:

        Italian, feminine variation of Lorenzo, Latin
      • Meaning:

        "from Laurentum or bay laurel"
      • Description:

        Unusual and appealing, Laurenza might make a perfect honor name for an ancestral Laura or Lawrence. Count Laurenza among the unknown-yet-usable Italian names for girls.
    • Talla
      • Leola
        • Amila
          • Origin:

            Sinhalese, Bosnian
          • Meaning:

            "valuable; hard work, labor"
          • Description:

            Lilting and pretty, but with plenty of substance, Amila is a name that works easily in different cultures. Similar in sound to international favorites, Amelia and Mila, it feels familiar but with a twist.
        • Onda
          • Origin:

            Italian
          • Meaning:

            "wave"
          • Description:

            An Italian word name that somehow feels incomplete in itself.
        • Inia
          • Origin:

            Maori
          • Meaning:

            "body of water"
          • Description:

            Māori form of India, also found as a male name: the Māori form of Aeneas.
        • Cana
          • Origin:

            Biblical place-name
          • Description:

            Cana is well-known to readers of the Bible as the city where Jesus performed his first miracle. If other place names, both modern and ancient, real and mythical, can be baby names, why not Cana? Rhyming with Dana, it can work for either gender.
        • Idonea
          • Carita
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "beloved"
            • Description:

              Carita may feel like an endearing nickname but it's a name in its own right, used throughout Scandinavia in this form and as Karita, Caritas, and Karitas as a variation on Charity.
          • Kaija
            • Meika
              • Origin:

                German and Dutch diminutive of Mary
              • Meaning:

                "drop of the sea; bitter; beloved"
              • Description:

                An intriguing variation of classic Mary that could act as a more inherently feminine alternative to the rising unisex Micah.
            • Aula
              • Origin:

                Latin, feminine form of Aula
              • Meaning:

                "little grandfather"
              • Description:

                A Roman name that's unused by English speakers today, but might appeal as a shorter, lighter alternative to Aurelia. The Latin vocabulary word aula also meant "hall".
            • Sharla