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184Maria is a feminine given name used in numerous languages, including Armenian, Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Corsican, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, Frisian, German, Greek, Italian, Norwegian, Occitan...
Marianna is a feminine given name used in numerous languages, including English, Estonian, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Latvian, Polish, Russian, and Slovak. It is a combination of Maria and Anna, though it can al...
Marika is a feminine given name used widely across Europe and beyond, serving as a diminutive of Maria and other names beginning with Mari. Its origins trace back to the Hungarian and Greek forms of Maria, which ultimate...
Marina is a feminine given name widely used across many cultures. It is the feminine form of the Latin name Marinus, which itself derives either from the Roman family name Marius or directly from the Latin word marinus m...
Maris is an Estonian feminine given name, functioning as a diminutive of Maria. The name follows a common Estonian pattern of forming short, affectionate variants from longer biblical and international names. Etymology A...
Marje is a feminine given name used in Estonia and Finland, functioning as a variant of Maarja (in Estonian) or Marja (in Finnish). Both of these names ultimately derive from Maria, the Latin form of Greek Μαρία, which i...
Marju is an Estonian female given name, serving as a variant of Maarja, itself the Estonian form of Maria, ultimately derived from the Hebrew name Mary (מִרְיָם, Miryam). The name is a relatively modern, uniquely Estonia...
Marta is a widespread feminine given name used in numerous languages, including Georgian, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Estonian, German, Icelandic, Italian, Latvian, Macedonian, Polish, Portugu...
Meeli is an Estonian feminine given name, derived as the feminine form of Meelis. The root name Meelis itself originates from the Estonian word meel, meaning "mind" or "mood", reflecting a naming tradition that values in...
Merike is an Estonian feminine given name, derived from the Estonian word meri meaning "sea" combined with a diminutive suffix. The name was first proposed for official use in 1929 by the linguist Julius Mägiste for incl...
Merit is a feminine given name used primarily in Estonia and Sweden, where it functions as a variant of Maret in Estonian and Marit in Swedish. Both Maret and Marit are ultimately derived from Margaret.EtymologyThe root...
Milvi is a feminine given name of Estonian origin. It was coined by Estonian writer Mats Tõnisson in 1914, but its meaning remains uncertain. The name is purely Estonian in usage and has no known roots in other languages...
Mirjam is a feminine given name used in Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, German, and Slovene, serving as a form of the Hebrew-derived Miriam.Etymology and Biblical OriginMiriam is the name of a prominent figure in the Old Testa...
Monika is a widespread variant of the name Monica, favored across Central, Eastern, and Northern Europe as well as in parts of Asia. Its usage spans Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, German, Latvian,...
Moonika is an Estonian feminine given name, a cognate of Monica and Monique. It is the Estonian form of Monika, which itself derives from Monica. The ultimate origin of the name is uncertain, likely of Berber or Phoenici...
Natalja is an Estonian and Russian given name, typically used as a transliteration of the Russian Наталья (Natal'ya), as well as the standard Estonian form. It functions primarily as a variant of Natalya, itself derived...
Nele is a feminine given name used primarily in Estonia and Germany. It functions as a diminutive of the Latin name Cornelia, which is the feminine form of the Roman family name Cornelius. The name attained some populari...
Niina is a feminine given name used in Finland and Estonia. In Finnish, it originated as a short form of Anniina, a Finnish diminutive of Anna. It is also used in both Finnish and Estonian as a form of Nina 1, a name of...
Õie is an Estonian female given name derived from õis, the Estonian word for "flower". The name comes from the attributive or genitive singular form õie, giving it a meaning akin to "of a flower" or "blossom". As a flora...
Olga is a feminine given name that originated as the Russian form of the Old Norse name Helga. The name is derived from the Old Norse adjective heilagr, meaning 'prosperous' or 'successful'. It was brought to Eastern Eur...
Piia is a Finnish and Estonian feminine given name, derived as a variant of Pia. Pia itself is the feminine form of the Late Latin name Pius, meaning "pious, dutiful." The name thus carries connotations of religious devo...
Pille is an Estonian feminine given name with a somewhat mysterious origin. It is possibly an 18th-century derivative of the German name Sibylle, which echoes the development of many Estonian names influenced by German o...
Pilvi is a Finnish and Estonian feminine given name meaning "cloud". Directly derived from the Finnish and Estonian noun pilvi (cloud), the name emerged in Finland as a mid-20th-century invention, reflecting a trend of n...
Piret is an Estonian feminine given name, derived as a form of Birgitta. The ultimate root is Bridget, which comes from the Old Irish Brigit, from Celtic Brigantī meaning "the exalted one." In Irish mythology, Brigit was...
Rahel is a feminine given name that serves as the Biblical Latin form of Rachel, as well as a German and Estonian variant. In the Latin version of the Bible, Vulgate, the Hebrew name רָחֵל (Raḥel), meaning "ewe," is rend...
Raili is a Finnish feminine given name that originated as a short form of Raakel or Rahel, the Finnish and German forms of Rachel respectively. The root name Rachel comes from the Hebrew רָחֵל (Raḥel) meaning "ewe". In t...
Reet is an Estonian feminine given name, derived as a short form of Margareeta, which itself is a variant of Margaret. The name ultimately traces back to the Greek word margaritēs meaning "pearl," a term likely borrowed...
EtymologyRegina is a Late Latin feminine name meaning "queen," directly derived from the Latin word rēgīna (also the Italian and Romanian word for queen). It has been used as a Christian name since early times, with part...
Riin is an Estonian feminine given name, typically considered a short form of Katariina, the Finnish and Estonian equivalent of Katherine. The name Riin reflects the Estonian tradition of using concise, melodic diminutiv...
Riina is a feminine given name used primarily in Estonia and Finland, functioning as a short form of Katariina, which itself is a local form of Katherine. Etymology Riina ultimately derives from the Greek name Aikaterine...
Rita is a female name used across many European languages and cultures, most commonly as a short form of Margherita and other names ending in rita. It has been adopted in Danish, English, Estonian, German, Hungarian, Ita...
Ruth 1 is a Hebrew name meaning "female friend," derived from the root reʿuṯ. In Hebrew, the name is written as Ruṯ. It appears in many languages including Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, German, Norwegian, Spanish, Sw...
Rutt is the Estonian form of Ruth, a feminine given name derived from the Hebrew name Ruṯ, possibly from the word reʿuṯ meaning "female friend". In the Old Testament, Ruth is the central figure of the Book of Ruth, a Moa...
Saima is a Finnish and Estonian feminine given name derived from Saimaa, the name of the largest lake in Finland. The etymology of the lake's name is unknown, but the name itself evokes the natural beauty and serene land...
Salme is a female given name used primarily in Estonia and Finland. The name derives from the Estonian word salm, meaning "poem, verse" — a lexeme that also appears dialectally with the sense "inlet, sound" in reference...
Etymology and OriginsSigne is a modern Scandinavian form of the Old Norse name Signý, which itself is derived from the elements sigr meaning "victory" and nýr meaning "new". Thus, the name carries the poetic meaning of "...
Sigrid is a feminine given name of Scandinavian origin, derived from the Old Norse name Sigríðr, composed of the elements sigr meaning "victory" and fríðr meaning "beautiful" or "beloved." The name has been widely used i...
Siiri is an Estonian and Finnish diminutive of Sigrid. The name traces its roots back to the Old Norse name Sigríðr, composed of the elements sigr "victory" and fríðr "beautiful, beloved", symbolizing a "beautiful victor...
Etymology Silja is a feminine given name used primarily in Finland and Estonia. It is a diminutive of Cecilia, and thus shares its ultimate root: Latin caecus meaning "blind." The Danish and Norwegian equivalent is Silje...
Sirje is a female given name used primarily in Estonia. Originally suggested by the Estonian linguist Julius Mägiste in 1929, it was derived from sinisirje, meaning "blue-feathered" in Estonian. In the national epic Kale...
Sofia is a form of Sophia used in various languages. Derived from the Greek word sophia meaning "wisdom", it shares the same root as the ancient Greek concept of wisdom. The name was borne by an early, possibly mythical,...
Svetlana is a feminine given name of Russian origin, derived from the Slavic root svet meaning "light, world". Despite its widespread use across Slavic countries, the name is not of ancient Slavic origin. It was coined b...
Tähti is a Finnish and Estonian feminine given name and surname that directly translates to "star". As a given name, it is used primarily in Estonia and Finland, reflecting the natural world and celestial themes common i...
Taimi is a feminine given name of Finnish and Estonian origin. It derives from the Finnish word taimi, meaning “sapling, young tree,” and from the Estonian word taim, meaning “plant.” Both words share a common linguistic...
Talvi is a feminine given name used primarily in Estonia, derived from the Estonian word talv, meaning "winter." Reflecting the season, the name evokes images of cold, snow, and quiet beauty. It belongs to a small group...
Etymology and OriginTatjana is a form of Tatiana used in several languages, including Croatian, Estonian, Finnish, German, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Slovene. In some cases, it derives from the Russian...
Terje 2 is an Estonian feminine given name, functioning as the Estonian equivalent of Terhi, a Finnish name with mythological origins. The name stems from the Finnish mythology embodied in the national epic, the Kalevala...
Tiia is a feminine given name primarily used in Estonia and Finland, serving as a short form of Dorothea. The name Dorothea itself derives from the Greek name Δωρόθεος (Dorotheos), meaning "gift of god"—from δῶρον (doron...
Tiina is a feminine given name widely used in Estonia and Finland. It originated as a short form of Kristiina, which itself is the Finnish and Estonian counterpart of Christina. The name Christina, deriving from the femi...
Tiiu is an Estonian feminine given name that is a variant of Tiia, though it may also partially derive from an archaic dialectal form of the word tihane meaning "titmouse" (a small songbird). Tiia itself is a Finnish and...
Triin is an Estonian feminine given name, a Diminutive of Katariina, which is itself the Estonian form of Katherine. The name likely derives from the North Germanic name Trina, first documented in 1652 in Sweden, and has...
EtymologyTriinu is the Estonian diminutive of Katariina, the Finnish and Estonian form of Katherine. The name Katherine ultimately derives from the Greek name Αἰκατερίνη (Aikaterine), with a debated etymology that may li...
Tuule is a Estonian variant of Tuuli, a feminine given name that directly translates to "wind." The name belongs to a rich tradition of nature-inspired names in Finnish and Estonian cultures, often evoking the elements a...
Tuuli is a feminine given name of Finnish and Estonian origin. It derives directly from the word tuuli, meaning "wind" in both Finnish and Estonian. The name belongs to a Finno-Ugric root shared with cognates such as Tuu...
Ülle is an Estonian feminine given name, derived as a feminine form of the masculine name Ülo. Ülo itself traces back to the Livonian names Ilo or Ylo, meaning "joy", and appears in historical texts like the 13th-century...
Urve is an Estonian feminine given name, derived from the Estonian word urb, meaning "catkin" — the woolly flowering cluster found on willows and other trees in early spring. The name thus carries connotations of nature,...
Vaike is a female given name of Estonian origin. It derives from the Estonian word vaikus, meaning "silence, calm". The name was coined by the writer Andres Saal for a character in his 1889 story Vambola. Saal created Va...
Veera is a Finnish and Estonian feminine given name, serving as a form of Vera. It is derived from the Russian name Вера (Vera), meaning "faith." The name is also sometimes associated with the Latin word verus, meaning "...
Etymology Veronika is the form of Veronica used across many languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, German, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Russian, Slovak, Slovene, Swed...
Viivi is the Finnish and Estonian form of Vivi, which itself is a Scandinavian diminutive of names beginning with Vi, as well as of Olivia and Sofia.EtymologyAccording to the Wiktionary article, Viivi is borrowed from Sw...