What is the name meaning of IDA. Phrases containing IDA
See name meanings and uses of IDA!IDA
IDA
Girl/Female
Tamil
Awakening, Love
Girl/Female
German
Active.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Heart, Goddess Parvati
Girl/Female
German
Active.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place called Iden Green in Benenden, Kent, or Iden Manor in Staplehurst, Kent, or from Iden in East Sussex. All these places are named in Old English as ‘pasture by the yew trees’, from īg ‘yew’ + denn ‘pasture’.North German : metronymic or patronymic from the personal name Ida.
Female
Scandinavian
 Scandinavian form of Icelandic Iða, IDA means "industrious." Compare with another form of Ida.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Ida. There is a place called Ide near Exeter in Devon; the etymology is obscure, perhaps from a pre-English river name; it does not seem to be connected with the surname.North German : variant of Ihde.Japanese : ‘sluice’, ‘spillway’; a topographic name for someone who lived near a dam. Variously written, it originated in Echizen and Kaga (now Fukui and Ishikawa prefectures) and is found mostly in eastern Japan.
Girl/Female
Latin American English German Greek Irish Teutonic
A nymph.
Girl/Female
Teutonic
Working noble Idelle.
Girl/Female
Teutonic
Working noble Idelle.
Girl/Female
Greek
Behold the sun.
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : from Ida, which is found as both a male and female personal name in English but only as a female name in German. This is of continental Germanic origin and was popular among the Normans, who brought it to England. Its etymology is disputed: it is thought by some to be of the same origin as hild- ‘battle’, ‘strife’; by others to be of the same origin as Old High German idis ‘(wise) woman’, or from Old Norse idh ‘work’, ‘activity’.Japanese : ‘rice paddy by the well’; habitational name from Ida-mura in Musashi (now TÅkyÅ and Saitama prefectures). Variously written and found mostly in eastern Japan and the RyÅ«kyÅ« Islands.
Surname or Lastname
Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic)
Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic) : metronymic from the Yiddish female name Itke, a pet form of the biblical name Judith + the Slavic possessive suffix -in.English : from the Middle English personal name Idkin, a pet form of the personal name Ida.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Idaspati | இதஸà¯à®ªà®¤à®¿
God of rain (Vishnu)
Idaspati | இதஸà¯à®ªà®¤à®¿
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic or metronymic from the Middle English personal name Ida, which was used for both sexes.
Boy/Male
Greek
An Argonaut.
Boy/Male
Anglo Saxon American
Name of a king.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Heart, Goddess Parvati
Girl/Female
British, English, French, German, Greek, Latin, Swedish
Prosperous; Happy; Hardworking; From Ida and Lee; Labor; Work; Woman
Girl/Female
Biblical
The hand of slander, or of cursing.
IDA
IDA
Boy/Male
British, English, Hindu, Indian
Friend; Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Smallest
Biblical
God is king
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic from the personal name Wiggin.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the medieval personal name Benedict (Latin Benedictus meaning ‘blessed’). In the 12th century the Latin form of the name is found in England alongside versions derived from the Old French form Beneit, Benoit, which was common among the Normans. See also Benedict.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
With Water Pond Lake
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Superior
Girl/Female
Native American
Grandmother.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Salvation; Freedom from Births
Girl/Female
Indian
Happy
IDA
IDA
IDA
IDA
IDA
a.
Of or pertaining to Idalium, a mountain city in Cyprus, or to Venus, to whom it was sacred.
n.
A species of Vaccinium (V. Vitis-idaea), which bears acid red berries which are sometimes used in cookery; -- locally called mountain cranberry.
n.
A plant (Lewisia rediviva) allied to the purslane, but with fleshy, farinaceous roots, growing in the mountains of Idaho, Montana, etc. It gives the name to the Bitter Root mountains and river. The Indians call both the plant and the river Spaet'lum.
n.
An umbelliferous plant (Carum Gairdneri); also, its small fleshy roots, which are eaten by the Indians from Idaho to California.
n. pl.
A linguistic family or stock of North American Indians, comprising many tribes, which extends from Montana and Idaho into Mexico. In a restricted sense the name is applied especially to the Snakes, the most northern of the tribes.
n.
The thimble-shaped fruit of the Rubus Idaeus and other similar brambles; as, the black, the red, and the white raspberry.
n.
One of the minute bodies into which the chromatin of the nucleus is resolved during mitotic cell division; the idant of Weismann.