1798 Four Letter Girl Names
- Read
- Abbo
Origin:
UgandanMeaning:
"vegetable"Description:
While some sources say Abbo means "accessory" or "accouterment", 20th-century sources on African names reveal it to mean "vegetable".
- Adyn
- Pacy
- Hoku
Origin:
HawaiianMeaning:
"night of the full moon"Description:
A spirited name with major cross-cultural significance. In addition to its celestial meaning in Hawaiian, it means "rhyme" in Finnish and "congratulations" in Japanese.
- West
Origin:
Word nameDescription:
Straightforward yet romantic, this is one newly minted name with long-term appeal, especially as a middle name. It was used as such for Tea Leoni and David Duchovny's Madelaine, whom they call West. Definitely ambigender, it was chosen by Marley Shelton for her daughter.
- Keet
Origin:
Dutch variation of KateDescription:
Despite sounding like Kate, the double E is likely to trip up English speakers who will want to pronounce this "Keat" instead of "Kate".
- Peti
- Octa
Origin:
Latin, Diminutive of OctaviaDescription:
A futuristic-sounding nickname for Octavia.
- Edee
- Kula
Origin:
SanskritMeaning:
"tribe"Description:
There are a number of towns and villages named Kula across the world, most of them in Eastern Europe and Pacific Islands. Kula is also a name of tribes in Thailand and Cambodia, Australia, and Nigeria. Although there are no Indian tribes by the name, the literal translation of the Sanskrit word kula is "tribe."
- Aoua
Origin:
Malian variation of EveDescription:
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.
- Aysu
- Gori
- Alie
- Elie
- Fípa
Origin:
Faroese, Old NorseMeaning:
"cotton grass"Description:
Faroese name derived from the Old Norse word fífa, which refers to cotton grass.
- Jive
Origin:
EnglishMeaning:
"dance"
- Zuni
Origin:
Native AmericanDescription:
The Zuni are a Native American tribe with origins in the American southwest, near the Zuni River valley. The tribe has been farming and living in the Zuni River valley for thousands of years, and many still reside in the Pueblo of Zuni — in present-day New Mexico.
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