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13,457Henrietta is a feminine given name used in English, Finnish, Hungarian, and Swedish. It is the Latinate form of Henriette, which itself is the French feminine diminutive of Henri. Ultimately, the name traces back to the...
Henriëtte is a Dutch variant of the feminine given name Henriette. The name is characterized by the presence of a diaeresis (trema) over the letter 'e', which indicates a separate syllable pronunciation; however, this di...
Henriette is the French feminine diminutive of Henri, ultimately derived from the Germanic name Heimirich, meaning "home ruler" from the elements heim "home" and rih">"ruler". The name emerged in the 17th century in Fran...
Henriikka is a Finnish feminine given name, derived from the Swedish Henrika, which itself is a feminine form of Henrik, the Swedish cognate of Henry. The name ultimately traces back to the Germanic name Heimirich, meani...
Henrika is a feminine given name used in Lithuanian and Swedish, derived as the female form of Henrik, which itself is a Scandinavian and Germanic variant of Henry. The ultimate root of the name, Henry, comes from the Ge...
Henrike is a German feminine given name, derived as the female form of Henrik, which itself is a variant of Heinrich (see Henry). The name ultimately descends from the Old High German name Heimirich, composed of the elem...
Henryka is the Polish feminine form of Henryk, itself the Polish masculine adaptation of Henry. The name ultimately derives from the Old German elements heim meaning 'home' and rih meaning 'ruler', thus signifying 'home...
Henye is a Yiddish variant of Hannah, a name of Hebrew origin meaning "favour" or "grace." The root name Hannah itself derives from the Hebrew Ḥanna, which comes from the verb ḥanan (to be gracious). In the Old Testament...
Ḫepat (also romanized as Ḫebat) was a goddess associated with Aleppo, originally worshiped in northern Syria in the third millennium BCE. Her name is often presumed to be a feminine nisba referring to her connection to t...
Hephzibah is a feminine given name from the Hebrew Bible. Derived from the Hebrew name חֶפְצִי־בָּה (Ḥeftsi-ba), it means "my delight is in her." In the Old Testament, Hephzibah is the wife of King Hezekiah of Judah and...
Hepsie is a rare diminutive of the biblical name Hephzibah, used primarily in English-speaking contexts. It is an affectionate, shortened form that reflects a trend in English naming history of creating pet names or nick...
Hepzibah is a variant spelling of Hephzibah, a name of Hebrew origin derived from Ḥefṣi-ḇāh meaning "my delight is in her." In the Old Testament, Hephzibah was the wife of King Hezekiah of Judah and the mother of Manasse...
Hera is the Greek goddess of marriage, women, and family, and the queen of the twelve Olympians in Greek mythology. She is the sister and wife of Zeus, the king of the gods, and the daughter of the Titans Cronus and Rhea...
Herais is an Ancient Greek personal name that was probably derived from the name of the Greek goddess Hera. The name Hera itself has an uncertain etymology but may be related to Greek words meaning "hero," "warrior," "pe...
Herenui is a feminine Tahitian name meaning "greatly loved," from here "loved, dear" and nui "big." While specific historical bearers may be limited, the name reflects Tahitian linguistic and cultural values, where compo...
Herleif is a Scandinavian name with a complex history, functioning both as a modern masculine given name in Norwegian and as the feminine form of the Old Norse name Herleifr in Old Norse. Its origin can be traced to the...
Herleva is an Old Germanic name of uncertain meaning, traditionally interpreted as derived from the elements heri "army" and leiba "remainder, remnant, legacy". This etymology parallels the Old Norse name Herleifr, compo...
Herlinde is a German feminine given name derived from the Old High German elements heri meaning "army" and lind meaning "soft, flexible, tender". The name thus combines martial strength with gentleness, a duality that re...
Hermelinda is the Spanish form of Ermelinde, which itself is derived from the Old German elements irmin "whole, great" and lind "soft, flexible, tender." The name thus carries the poetic connotation of "great tenderness....
Hermenegilda is a feminine given name used in Portuguese- and Spanish-speaking countries. It is the female form of the Germanic name Hermenegild, which itself derives from the Visigothic name Hermenegildo.The root of the...
Hermia is a literary name invented by William Shakespeare for his comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595). It is the feminine form of Hermes, the name of the Greek god associated with travel, communication, and luck. The...
Hermína is the Czech and Slovak form of Hermine, with the pronunciation roughly [ˈɦɛrmiːna] in Czech and a similar realization in Slovak. This feminine given name ultimately traces back to the Old Germanic compound meani...
Hermina is a feminine given name used in Dutch, Slovene, Hungarian, and Croatian cultures. It is a form of Hermine, the German feminine form of Herman. The root name Herman derives from the Old German elements heri "army...
Hermine is a female given name used in French and German, formed as the feminine counterpart of Herman (or its variant Hermann) and sharing the same etymological roots. The underlying male name derives from Old Germanic...
Hermínia is the Portuguese feminine form of Herminius, a Roman name of uncertain origin. It may be derived from the name of the Greek god Hermes.EtymologyHermínia ultimately traces back to Hermes, the Greek messenger god...
Herminia is a feminine name of Spanish and Roman origin. It is a feminine form of the ancient Roman name Herminius, which may be derived from Etruscan or possibly from the name of the Greek god Hermes.EtymologyThe name H...
Hermione is a feminine given name of Greek origin, derived from the name of the messenger god Hermes. In Greek mythology, Hermione was the daughter of Menelaus and Helen of Troy. The name was also borne by an early Chris...
Hero 1 is a feminine first name of Greek origin, derived from the Greek word ἥρως (heros) meaning "hero." In Greek mythology, Hero was a priestess of Aphrodite and the lover of Leander. According to legend, Leander would...
Herodias is a feminine name of biblical and Greek origin, derived from the masculine name Herod. The name Herod itself comes from the Greek Herodes (Ἡρῴδης), which probably means “song of the hero,” combining heros (“her...
Herse is a name from Greek mythology meaning "dew, raindrops" in Greek. It refers to both a personification and a mortal figure. Etymology The name Herse is derived from the Ancient Greek word ἕρση (hérsē), meaning "dew....
Hersilia is a name from Roman mythology, of uncertain meaning. It may be derived from Greek ἕρση (herse) meaning "dew." In Roman legend, she was a Sabine woman who became the wife of Romulus, the founder of Rome, though...
Herta is a German feminine given name, a variant of Hertha. The name Hertha itself originates from a textual misreading: the Roman historian Tacitus, in his 1st-century work Germania, described a goddess named Nerthus, a...
Hertha is a feminine given name of German origin. The name is a variant form of Nerthus, resulting from a transcription error in the works of the Roman historian Tacitus. In the 1st century AD, Tacitus described Nerthus,...
Hertta is a Finnish feminine given name, derived from the German Hertha. In Finnish, the name also directly corresponds to the word for the card suit hearts, giving it a playful and visual connotation.EtymologyHertha its...
Etymology and MeaningHerut is a Hebrew female name that directly derives from the word herut (חֵרוּת), meaning "freedom" in Modern Hebrew. The name is part of a broader tradition of ideologically-charged names in Israel,...
Hester is a given name used in Dutch, English, and Latin Biblical contexts. It is the Latin form of the name Esther. The name has been in use in England since the Protestant Reformation, when many names from the Bible, p...
Hestia is the Greek goddess of the hearth, home, and domestic life, whose name derives from the Ancient Greek word ἑστία (hestia), meaning "hearth, fireplace, altar." In mythology, she is the firstborn child of the Titan...
Heta is a Finnish feminine name that originated as a vernacular form of Hedvig. Hedvig itself is the Scandinavian, Finnish, and Hungarian form of Hedwig, a name of Old German origin derived from the elements hadu ('battl...
Hetepheres is an Ancient Egyptian feminine name borne by several royal women of the 4th Dynasty (c. 26th century BC). The name derives from Egyptian ḥtp-ḥrs, meaning “satisfied is her face,” composed of ḥtp “peace, satis...
Hettie is a diminutive of Henrietta or Hester. While the form Hetty (with a "t") is more common, Hettie (with the -ie diminutive ending) is a standard variation in English, particularly in the 19th and early 20th centuri...
Heulwen is a Welsh feminine given name meaning "sunshine" (a compound of haul "sun" and gwen "white, blessed").EtymologyThe name derives from the Welsh words haul ("sun") and gwen (meaning "white, fair, blessed"). Modern...
Hiacynta is the Polish feminine form of the Greek name Hyacinthus, derived from the Greek Hyakinthos, the name of a mythological youth and the hyacinth flower. In Greek legend, Hyacinthus was a beloved of the god Apollo,...
Hiba is a feminine given name of Arabic origin, meaning "gift". It derives from the Arabic root wahaba (to give), and is closely related to the masculine name Hibah. The name reflects the cultural value of gifting and ge...
Hibo is the Somali form of Hiba, a name derived from the Arabic root wahaba meaning "to give." The name Hiba directly signifies "gift" in Arabic, and Hibo carries this same meaning in a Somali context. It is a feminine n...
Hicran is a Turkish and Azerbaijani feminine given name meaning "separation, parting." The name derives from the Arabic word hijrān (هجران), which carries the same sense of separation or abandonment. It entered Turkish a...
Hidaya is a feminine name of Swahili origin, deriving from the Arabic root element hadīya, which means 'gift' or 'present'. In Swahili, the name is interpreted as "gift, precious, beautiful," reflecting a valued and cher...
EtymologyHideko is a feminine Japanese given name composed of two elements. The first, hide, can be written with various kanji such as 秀 meaning "excellent, outstanding" or 英 meaning "excellent, fine" (the same hide el...
Hiền is a Vietnamese female given name of Sino-Vietnamese origin. It is derived from the Chinese character 賢 (hiền), which means "virtuous" or "worthy."Etymology and MeaningThe name Hiền comes from the Sino-Vietnamese r...
EtymologyHiezabel is the Latin form of Jezebel, a name derived from the Hebrew ʾIzevel (אִיזֶבֶל). The original Hebrew name likely comes from a Phoenician source, perhaps containing the Semitic root zbl meaning "to exalt...
Origin and Meaning Hiʻiaka is a Polynesian-derived name of Hawaiian origin, meaning "held essence", from hiʻi "hold, carry" and aka "essence, image, embryo". This name is associated with the Hawaiian goddess Hiʻiaka, the...
Hikari (ひかり, ヒカリ, 光) is a Japanese unisex given name with the primary meaning of “light.” The most common kanji used is 光 (hikari), but other kanji combinations can also form the name. It is frequently written in...
Hila (הילה) is a Hebrew feminine given name meaning "halo, aura," derived from the Semitic root halal, which carries connotations of praise, radiance, and shining. This root also appears in the Hebrew word hallel, as in...
Hilaria is a feminine given name that originated as the female form of Hilarius, a Roman name rooted in the Latin word hilaris, meaning "cheerful" or "merry." The name ultimately stems from the Greek word ἱλαρός (hilaros...
Etymology and History Hilary is an English given name derived from the Latin hilaris, meaning "cheerful" or "merry," which itself comes from the Greek ἱλαρός (hilaros). The name traces back to the ancient Roman names Hil...
Etymology and Linguistic RootsHild is a name of Old English origin, directly derived from Hilda, which itself stems from the Proto-Germanic element *hildiz meaning "battle." This element is reflected in Old English hild,...
Hilda is a feminine given name used widely across European languages including Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Norwegian, Spanish, and Swedish. It originated as a short form of names containing the Ol...
Hilde is a feminine given name used primarily in Dutch, German, and Norwegian. It is a variant of Hilda, which originates as a short form of names containing the Old Frankish element hildi, Old High German hilt, or Old E...
EtymologyHildegard is a female given name of Germanic origin, derived from the Old High German elements hilt ("battle") and gart ("enclosure, yard"). The name thus means "battle enclosure" and reflects the martial naming...
Hildegarda is the Czech form of the German name Hildegard, which is in turn derived from the Old Germanic elements hilt ("battle") and gart ("enclosure, yard"), meaning "battle enclosure" or "battle protection." This nam...
Hildegarde is the French form of Hildegard, a name of Old German origin. The original name Hildegard is composed of the elements hilt meaning "battle" and gart meaning "enclosure, yard", thus conveying the sense of "batt...