I have always had a soft spot for names that end in A.
There is something about that final vowel that just works. It gives a name a natural finishing point. A warmth. A softness that does not make the name weak, just complete. And when you look at the most beautiful girl names across every language and every tradition, so many of them end exactly this way.
Greek names. Latin names. Hebrew names. Italian names. Sanskrit names. Celtic names. They all figured out the same thing independently. The A ending on a girl’s name is one of the most beautiful sounds in any language.
I put together 333 of my favorites. Some you will know. Some you have probably never heard of. All of them are worth your time.
Short and Sweet Names Ending in A
I love a short name that ends in A.
One or two syllables, nothing extra, and that warm final sound that makes the whole thing feel complete. These are the names that land fast and stay with you. Clean and confident and completely lovely.
- Ava
- Eva
- Ada
- Ida
- Ora
- Una
- Nia
- Mia
- Lia
- Lea
- Bea
- Gia
- Via
- Tia
- Zia
- Noa
- Zara
- Vera
- Nora
- Cora
- Lena
- Mila
- Lila
- Isla
- Lyra
- Freya
- Thea
- Rhea
- Shea
- Bria
Classic Names Ending in A That Never Go Out of Style
These names have been working for centuries and they will keep working long after every trend has come and gone.
I find something genuinely comforting about that. You are not gambling on something new. You are choosing something that has already proven itself across generations of real women who carried it well.
- Emma
- Anna
- Clara
- Laura
- Maria
- Julia
- Diana
- Helena
- Rosa
- Sofia
- Stella
- Elsa
- Alma
- Dora
- Flora
- Celia
- Lydia
- Nina
- Lara
- Tara
- Sara
- Vera
- Rita
- Greta
- Marta
- Olga
- Irma
- Edna
- Norma
- Selma
Italian Names Ending in A
Italian names ending in A are some of the most beautiful sounds in any language.
I genuinely mean that. There is a musicality to Italian girl names that is almost impossible to explain but completely impossible to miss. They flow. They land softly. They sound like someone took extra care when putting the syllables together.
- Valentina
- Seraphina
- Arabella
- Isabella
- Annabella
- Rosella
- Fiorella — meaning little flower
- Graziella
- Maristella
- Donatella
- Fiamma — meaning flame
- Primavera — meaning spring
- Allegra — meaning joyful
- Serena
- Chiara — Italian form of Clara
- Ginevra — Italian form of Genevieve
- Leonora
- Eleonora
- Beatrice — wait, it ends in E in English, but Beatriça in the original feels right here
- Francesca
- Lucrezia
- Fiora
- Cosima
- Azzurra — meaning sky blue
- Maristella
Greek Names Ending in A
Greek mythology gave us some of the most extraordinary female names that have ever existed and almost all of them end in A.
This is where I could honestly spend the whole list. Calliope. Persephone. Andromeda. Cassiopeia. The Greeks were naming women beautifully thousands of years ago and the names have never stopped working.
- Calliope
- Persephone
- Andromeda
- Cassiopeia — does not end in A but close enough that I had to mention it
- Penelope
- Calypso — ends in O but she belongs in this company
- Thalia
- Erato
- Terpsichora
- Urania
- Polymnia
- Phoeba — variant of Phoebe
- Selena
- Athena
- Artemisa — Spanish form of Artemis
- Medea
- Ariadna — Spanish form of Ariadne
- Electra
- Daphna — variant of Daphne
- Lysandra
- Cassandra
- Alexandra
- Theodora
- Isadora
- Leandra
Hebrew and Biblical Names Ending in A
The Hebrew naming tradition is one of the oldest and richest in the world.
And so many of the most beautiful Hebrew girl names end in A. Abigail becomes Abigaila. Hannah. Dinah. Kezia. Rebecca. These names carry thousands of years of meaning and still sound completely fresh.
- Hannah
- Rebecca — ends in A, completely
- Sarah
- Dinah
- Kezia
- Leah — ends in H but sounds like A
- Miriam — ends in M but Miriama is used
- Adina — meaning gentle and noble
- Aviva — meaning spring and renewal
- Batya — meaning daughter of God
- Chana — original Hebrew form of Hannah
- Devora — original Hebrew form of Deborah
- Eliana — meaning my God has answered
- Hadassah — the Hebrew name of Esther, meaning myrtle
- Ilana — meaning tree
- Liora — meaning my light
- Micaela
- Noa — already listed, deserves to be here too
- Rivka — original Hebrew form of Rebecca
- Shayna — meaning beautiful
- Tamar — meaning palm tree
- Tova — meaning good
- Yael — meaning mountain goat, one of the great heroines of the Hebrew Bible
- Zahava — meaning golden
- Zipporah — meaning bird, Moses’s wife
Celtic and Irish Names Ending in A
Celtic names ending in A have a particular wild beauty to them.
Not soft wild. Ancient wild. The kind of beauty that belongs to open land and old stories and names that have been spoken at firesides for a very long time. I love these more than I can properly explain.
- Aoibheanna — pronounced AY-vee-ana, meaning radiant beauty
- Caoimhseanna
- Fionnuala — meaning white shoulder
- Gormlatha
- Muireanna — meaning sea white, feminine form of Muireann
- Niamha — variant spelling
- Orla — already a complete name, Orla stands alone
- Rónána — feminine form of Ronan
- Siobhána — extended form of Siobhan
- Treasa — meaning strength
- Etna — after the Irish Saint Ethnea
- Brigha — variant of Brigid
- Cliodhna — ends in A in some spellings
- Sinéada — extended form of Sinéad
- Moira — Scottish and Irish form of Mary
Sanskrit and Indian Names Ending in A
Sanskrit names carry meanings so beautiful they sometimes stop me mid-sentence.
I find this category genuinely moving. The depth of meaning in Sanskrit girl names is extraordinary. Every name is a small poem. And the A ending that most of them carry gives them a warmth and a completeness that feels completely natural.
- Priya — meaning beloved
- Kavya — meaning poetry
- Shreya — meaning auspicious and beautiful
- Divya — meaning divine
- Ananya — meaning unique and matchless
- Avantika
- Chandrika — meaning moonlight
- Deepika — meaning little lamp
- Esha — meaning desire and wish
- Geetika — meaning little song
- Harsha — meaning happiness
- Ishika
- Jyotsna — meaning moonlight
- Kamala — meaning lotus
- Lavanya — meaning grace and beauty
- Madhura — meaning sweet
- Nalika — meaning lotus stem
- Padma — meaning lotus
- Radha — Krishna’s beloved
- Sarika — meaning mynah bird
- Taruna — meaning young
- Urvasha
- Vanya — meaning forest
- Yamuna — the sacred river
- Zara — already listed, fits everywhere
Slavic Names Ending in A
Slavic names have a richness and a warmth that I think is genuinely underappreciated in the English speaking world.
Russian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian. All of these traditions produce girl names ending in A that are some of the most beautiful you will ever find. And most of them are still rare enough in English speaking countries to feel completely original.
- Natasha
- Sasha
- Masha — Russian pet form of Maria
- Dasha — Russian pet form of Darya
- Katya
- Sonya
- Tanya
- Anya
- Vanya
- Nadya — meaning hope
- Vera — already listed, but she belongs here in her Slavic home
- Olga
- Darya
- Zoya — meaning life
- Galya
- Mila — meaning gracious and dear
- Agata — Slavic form of Agatha
- Bogna — meaning God’s gift
- Czeslawa
- Dorota — Slavic form of Dorothy
- Ewelina — Slavic form of Evelyn
- Halina — Slavic form of Helen
- Irena
- Jagoda — meaning berry
- Kinga
Long and Elegant Names Ending in A
Sometimes you want a name that takes its time.
Long names ending in A have a particular elegance to them. They start somewhere interesting and arrive at that final warm A in a way that feels genuinely satisfying. Say Evangelina out loud. Say Seraphina. Say Christabella. You hear what I mean immediately.
- Evangelina
- Seraphina
- Christabella
- Wilhelmina
- Theodelinda
- Maximilliana
- Alexandrina — Queen Victoria’s actual first name
- Clementina — Italian form of Clementine
- Florentina
- Giuseppina — Italian form of Josephine
- Leopoldina
- Margherita — Italian form of Margaret
- Napoleona — bold and completely extraordinary
- Ottiliana
- Palmira
- Quintina
- Rosalinda — Spanish form of Rosalind
- Scholastica — the twin sister of Saint Benedict
- Theodosia
- Ulrica — feminine form of Ulrich
- Valentina — already listed, still one of the best
- Walpurga — the saint whose feast is the night of May Eve
- Xantippe — Socrates’s wife, bold and original
- Yolanda
- Zenobia — the warrior queen of Palmyra
Vintage Names Ending in A That Are Coming Back
Old fashioned names ending in A are having a genuine moment right now.
And I think it is completely deserved. These names were common a hundred years ago and then disappeared for a few generations and are now coming back because enough time passed for them to stop feeling old and start feeling genuinely beautiful again. Trust me on this one.
- Mabel — does not end in A but Mabela does
- Alma
- Edna
- Selma
- Norma
- Velma
- Thelma
- Wilma
- Irma
- Minna
- Lena
- Hilda — ends in A
- Gerda — Nordic, meaning enclosure
- Hedda
- Ingrid — does not end in A but Ingra does
- Sigga — Icelandic short form
- Ragna — meaning counsel of the gods
- Thora — ends in A
- Magna
- Frida — meaning peace
- Hulda — meaning sweet and lovable in Hebrew
- Astria — variant of Astrid
- Brunhilda
- Mathilda — ends in A
- Griselda
Modern and Invented Names Ending in A
Some of the most beautiful names ending in A are relatively new.
Created in the last century or two. Built from beautiful sounds rather than borrowed from ancient traditions. And they work because the A ending gives them an anchor, a warmth, a sense of completion that makes even a newer name feel like it has always existed.
- Kayla
- Layla
- Ayla
- Jayla
- Shayla
- Makayla
- Mikayla
- Kaela
- Nevaeh — heaven spelled backwards, ends in H but sounds like A
- Aliya
- Aaliya
- Kira
- Kyra
- Tyra
- Lyra — already listed, fits here too
- Nyla
- Ryla
- Ayla
- Brayla
- Zyla
- Myla
- Kyla
- Jyla
- Lyla
- Skyla
Rare and Unusual Names Ending in A
These are the names I find most exciting.
Genuinely rare. Genuinely beautiful. Names that most people have never heard of but will never forget once they do. If you want something with real depth and real originality and that warm A ending that makes everything feel complete, this section is where I would spend the most time.
- Thessalia — from the ancient Greek region
- Eulalia — meaning sweetly speaking
- Calanthe — meaning beautiful flower, ends in E but Calantha ends in A
- Calantha
- Zenobia — already listed, still extraordinary
- Sidonia — from the Phoenician city of Sidon
- Eudoxia — meaning good reputation
- Philomena — meaning lover of strength
- Euphemia — meaning well spoken
- Theophania — meaning manifestation of God
- Epiphania — meaning appearance or manifestation
- Theodelinda — already listed, the Lombard queen
- Scholastica — already listed, Saint Benedict’s twin
- Macrina — the sister of Saint Basil, one of the great intellectual women of the early church
- Nymphadora — meaning gift of the nymphs
- Chrysanthema — meaning golden flower
- Callista — meaning most beautiful
- Melisenda — medieval Spanish form of Millicent
- Berenguela — medieval Spanish, a queen’s name
- Urraca — medieval Spanish queen, bold and completely original
- Eudosia
- Anastasia
- Pulcheria — meaning beauty, a Byzantine empress
- Galla — a Roman saint
- Perpetua — meaning everlasting, an early Christian martyr
The Final Thirty Three
- Lyudmila — Slavic, meaning people’s grace
- Ludovika — Germanic feminine form of Ludwig
- Brunhilda — already listed
- Genoveva — Spanish and Portuguese form of Genevieve
- Xiomara — Spanish, meaning ready for battle
- Xiuying
- Yumika — Japanese, meaning beautiful dream
- Azalea — the flower name, warm and vivid
- Magnolia — the tree blossom, long and beautiful
- Wisteria — already a name that works, ends in A
- Camellia
- Petunia — unconventional but completely original
- Nasturtia — from the nasturtium flower
- Lobelia — the wildflower, also used by Tolkien
- Primula — the primrose, also used by Tolkien
- Belladonna — meaning beautiful woman in Italian
- Amaranta — Spanish form of Amaranth, meaning unfading
- Rosaria — meaning rosary, warm and Italian
- Consolata — meaning consolation, an Italian name with real depth
- Assunta — meaning assumption, an Italian feast day name
- Nunzia — Italian, connected to the Annunciation
- Immacolata — meaning immaculate, Italian
- Addolorata — meaning sorrowful, after Our Lady of Sorrows
- PietÃ
- Graziosa — meaning graceful
- Benvenuta — meaning welcome
- Delizia — meaning delight
- Letizia — Italian form of Letitia, meaning joy
- Livia — short form of Olivia, ancient Roman
- Silvia — Roman, meaning from the forest
- Flavia — Roman, meaning golden haired
- Claudia — Roman, timeless and elegant
- Lavinia — from Virgil’s Aeneid, one of the most beautiful names in Latin literature
Wrapping It Up
I genuinely believe names ending in A are some of the most beautiful in any language.
And what I love most about this list is how far it reaches. Greek mythology. Hebrew scripture. Italian poetry. Sanskrit tradition. Celtic legend. Slavic warmth. All of them arrived at the same place independently. That soft, warm, complete final sound that makes a girl’s name feel exactly right.
Go back through the sections that stopped you. Say your favorites out loud slowly.
You will know when you find the one.