FrDncr22DMB's Personal Name List

Annie
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, French, Dutch
Pronounced: AN-ee(English) A-NEE(French) AH-nee(Dutch)
Personal remark: ANNIE Virginia "Avi”; ANNIE Haven
Rating: 59% based on 14 votes
Diminutive of Anne 1.
Ava 2
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Persian
Other Scripts: آوا(Persian)
Pronounced: aw-VAW
Personal remark: AVA Lyon; AVA Virginia
Rating: 49% based on 17 votes
Means "voice, sound" in Persian.
Eden
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Hebrew, English (Modern), French (Modern)
Other Scripts: עֵדֶן(Hebrew)
Pronounced: EE-dən(English)
Personal remark: EDEN Lyon; EDEN Oak
Rating: 61% based on 15 votes
From the biblical place name, itself possibly from Hebrew עֵדֶן (ʿeḏen) meaning "pleasure, delight" [1], or perhaps derived from Sumerian 𒂔 (edin) meaning "plain". According to the Old Testament the Garden of Eden was the place where the first people, Adam and Eve, lived before they were expelled.
Haven
Gender: Feminine & Masculine
Usage: English
Pronounced: HAY-vən
Personal remark: Annie HAVEN; Virginia HAVEN
Rating: 50% based on 5 votes
From the English word for a safe place, derived ultimately from Old English hæfen.
Macon
Gender: Feminine
Usage: American (South, Rare)
Personal remark: Annie Macon “Annie Mac”; MACON Lyon
Rating: 25% based on 14 votes
Transferred use of the surname Macon.
Memphis
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Modern)
Pronounced: MEHM-fis
Personal remark: MEMPHIS Oak; Memphis EVE
Rating: 32% based on 13 votes
From the name of an important city of ancient Egypt, or the city in Tennessee that was named after it. It is derived from a Greek form of Egyptian mn-nfr meaning "enduring beauty".
Virginia
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, Greek, Ancient Roman
Other Scripts: Βιργινία(Greek)
Pronounced: vər-JIN-yə(English) veer-JEE-nya(Italian) beer-KHEE-nya(Spanish)
Personal remark: Virginia EVE; AVA Virginia
Rating: 34% based on 13 votes
Feminine form of the Roman family name Verginius or Virginius, which is of unknown meaning, but long associated with Latin virgo "maid, virgin". According to a legend, it was the name of a Roman woman killed by her father so as to save her from the clutches of a crooked official.

This was the name of the first English baby born in the New World: Virginia Dare in 1587 on Roanoke Island. Perhaps because of this, the name has generally been more popular in America than elsewhere in the English-speaking world, though in both Britain and America it was not often used until the 19th century. The baby was named after the Colony of Virginia, which was itself named for Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen. A more recent bearer was the English novelist Virginia Woolf (1882-1941).

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