Names ending in a
- Emzara
Origin:
HebrewMeaning:
"mother of Sarai"Description:
The name of Noah's wife, a daughter of Rake'el (his father's brother), according to Jubilees 4:33 of the Old Testament Apocrypha. It may mean "mother of Sarai".
- Arabia
Origin:
Place-nameDescription:
A phonetically attractive place-name that can be used for babies but rarely is.
- Aaliya
Origin:
ArabicMeaning:
"heavens, highborn, exalted"Description:
A spelling variant of Aliyah and Aaliyah, popularised by the singer of the same name.
- Olima
Origin:
Surname nameDescription:
Olima began as a surname, first seen in the US as the last name of immigrants from European countries including Italy and Portugal. While it hasn't seen much use as a given name, the feminine ending makes it a definite possibility, especially for speakers of the Romance languages.
- Panayiota
Origin:
GreekMeaning:
"devotee of the Virgin Mary"Description:
Form of Panagiota
- Aluna
Origin:
Mwera, KenyanMeaning:
"come here"Description:
Aluna has authentic Mwera roots as a name meaning "she weeps", but it may rise as an American invented name, elaborating on Luna.
- Jozefa
- Inia
Origin:
MaoriMeaning:
"praised one"Description:
Maori form of Aeneas, also used for girls as the Māori form of India.
- Nadalia
Origin:
French/ArmenianMeaning:
"born at Christmas"Description:
More unusual than Natalia or Natalie.
- Endelienta
Origin:
CornishDescription:
Saint Endelienta is the woman whose name became Endellion, of David Cameron fame. Endelienta was the daughter of a king and reputed to be the god-daughter of King Arthur. Her feast day is 29 April, making this name an interesting choice for a daughter born on that day.
- Contina
- Gaila
- Jeneva
Origin:
Variation of Geneva, FrenchMeaning:
"juniper tree"Description:
If you go off of the 100 Year Rule, Geneva should be coming back into style right about now. Which means we could be hearing more of the Jeneva variation as well.
- Alethia
- Camala
- Layda
- Ekika
- Kenja
- Jacca
Origin:
Cornish variation of JackDescription:
So many people love Jack but worry about its popularity. If you count yourself amongst these people, this rare but intuitive Cornish version of the name might be a choice worth consideration.
- Opha