Aurelia a
ZlataZora a
DanicaSerena a
ClaraRadmila a
Timea = "joyful"
Melania a Morena = „black, dark“ v Melania in Greek and Morena in Spanish
Sophia and
SoniaLea a
TabeaKvěta a
Hana = „flower", Květa in Czech and
Hana in Japanese
Hannah a
Maite = „lovable“ –
Hannah in Hebrew and
Maite in Basque
Korinna Lada = "maiden",
Korinna in Greek and Lada in Slavic elements
Elodie a
Odetta = „wealth“
Leda a
Silvia = „woman from forest“
Silvia a
Saskia = meant like „woman from forest ans
Saxon“
Vanessa a Mahulena = artificially it was formed from poet and author
Patricia a
Isobel = from book "The O´Sullivan Twins" by
Enid Blyton
Luisa a
Lotta = from book "
Luise und
Lotte" by
Erich Kästner
Charlotte a
Karla
Czech origin:
Libuše a
MilenaLiběna a
MilenaVendula a Věnceslava = "vyen-tse-slah-vah"
Sonia a
Nadia
Latin:
Valeria a
VictoriaLucia a
LiviaJulia a
KlaudiaGreta a
Rita
French:
Charlotte a
Jeannette
Celtic:
Edith a
FionaMalvina a
FionaEdith a
Malvina
Irish:
Caitlín a Róisín
Caitlín a Nóirín
Róisín a Nóirín
Hebrew:
Jana a
IvanaJane a
IvaJane a Siân
Siân a
IvaJane a
JoannaJana a
JohannaSiobhan a
Johanna