Queen and Princess Names Starting With A

  1. Aodhnait
    • Origin:

      Irish, Gaelic
    • Meaning:

      "little fire"
    • Description:

      An ancient Irish saint's name derived from the same root as the popular Aidan.
  2. Aoibh
    • Origin:

      Celtic, Short Form Of aoibheann
    • Meaning:

      "beautiful, radiant"
    • Description:

      One of many Irish names that, despite pronunciation challenge, are beginning to be taken into consideration here as authentic Celtic versions of familiar English names.
  3. Aoibhe
    • Origin:

      Irish
    • Meaning:

      "life, or beauty"
    • Description:

      Aoibhe may be considered a form of either Aoife -- beauty in Irish -- or Eve, which means life. Either way, this popular Irish name for girls is pronounced as Eva though outside of Ireland few would guess that. Leave Aoibhe to the Gaelic speakers.
  4. Aoibheann
    • Origin:

      Irish
    • Meaning:

      "beautiful sheen"
    • Description:

      An ancient Aoibheann was the mother of Saint Enda, and Aoibheann remains popular in Ireland today, sometimes with its Anglicized spelling Eavan.
  5. Aoibhin
    • Origin:

      Irish
    • Meaning:

      "beautiful sheen"
    • Description:

      A slimmed down spelling of the more traditional Aiobheann. It's a beautiful name, but the spelling might throw some non-Irish natives off.
  6. Aoibhinn
    • Origin:

      Variation of Aoibheann, Irish
    • Meaning:

      "beautiful sheen"
    • Description:

      Aoibhinn and its twin name Aoibheann may be popular in Ireland but most English-speakers would find the spelling baffling and the pronunciation impossible to divine. It's ee-van, or se-vin, fitting with the Irish popularity of many names -- Aoife, Eabha, Ava -- with this similar sound.
  7. Aoibhín
    • Aoife
      • Origin:

        Irish Gaelic
      • Meaning:

        "beautiful, radiant"
      • Description:

        Aoife, pronounced EE-fa, is derived from the Irish word aoibh, meaning "beauty." Aoife was borne by several different heroines of ancient Irish legend. In one tale, she was the fiercest woman warrior in the world and enemy of her twin sister, Scathach.
    • Aoko
      • Origin:

        Japanese
      • Meaning:

        "blue child"
    • Aolani
      • Origin:

        Hawaiian
      • Meaning:

        "cloudy skies"
      • Description:

        An unusual Hawaiian nature name with an appealing vowel-rich sound.
    • Aotea
      • Origin:

        Maori
      • Meaning:

        "bright dawn"
      • Description:

        A vowel-rich Māori name with a natural meaning. New Zealand is known in Māori as Aotearoa, which can be translated as "land of abiding day" or "land of the long white cloud".
    • Aoua
      • Origin:

        Malian variation of Eve
      • Description:

        Aoua is a Malian variation of Eve - the original woman’s name - which is fitting for a name so closely connected to Mali's first female parliamentarian.
    • Aparajita
      • Origin:

        Indian, Hindi and Sanskrit
      • Meaning:

        "unconquered"
      • Description:

        A long and lovely Sanskrit name with a great meaning.
    • Aphia
      • Aphra
        • Origin:

          Hebrew, variation of Aphrah
        • Meaning:

          "dust"
        • Description:

          Aphra would make an interesting choice-- especially since it's the name of the first professional female writer in English, the seventeenth century's Aphra Behn. Born in 1640, she was a prolific dramatist of the English Restoration, and a spy.
      • Aphria
        • Aphrodite
          • Origin:

            Greek mythology name
          • Meaning:

            "foam or born from the sea"
          • Description:

            The name of the Greek goddess of love has rarely descended to mortal use, though the Roman equivalent Venus, thanks to tennis star Williams, now seems completely possible. But with the new fashion for goddess names, we may see more little Aphrodites in the playground with Jupiter and Juno. Nineteen baby girls received the name in the US last year.
        • Apirka
          • Apirkah
            • Apolline
              • Origin:

                French form of Apollonia
              • Description:

                Apolline is a luscious French name chic in Paris and ripe for the plucking in the English-speaking world. Derived from the mythological name Apollo, the name may mean strength; Apollo was the god of sun and light. Apolline is a perfect choice for those attracted to the name Apple who don't want to go quite that far.