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Lynnaya
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From Lynn ('lake') combined with the suffix -aya - loosely 'lake' with a graceful/melodic ending (interpreted as 'lake + grace/beauty') |
English, Mayan |
Girl |
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Maea
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Uncertain. May be related to Maia ('mother'/'great'), Maya ('illusion' or 'water'), or Mae/May ('born in May'/'pearl'). |
Mayan |
Girl |
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Mayas
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Likely derived from Maya - 'illusion' or 'magic' in Sanskrit; also connected to Maia (a mythic mother figure) or to the Maya people/culture. |
Greek, Latin, Mayan, Sanskrit, Spanish |
Girl |
|
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Meaha
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Unknown. No established meaning; if from Hawaiian elements it could combine 'mea' (thing/person) and 'ha' (breath), but this is speculative |
Mayan |
Girl |
|
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Meia
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Associated with Maia - 'mother' or 'great' (Greek); sometimes linked to Maya ('illusion' in Sanskrit) |
Mayan |
Girl |
|
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myah
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Variant of Mya/Maya - often associated with 'illusion' (Sanskrit Maya), 'mother'/'great' (Maia), or as a diminutive of Maria ('beloved'/'bitter' variants) |
English, Greek, Latin, Mayan |
Girl |
|
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Myetta
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Diminutive of Mya/Maya: "little Mya" (Maya carries various meanings such as "illusion" in Sanskrit, "mother"/Maia in Greek, or "emerald" in Burmese) |
Mayan |
Girl |
|
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myrraya
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No established historical meaning; typically taken to echo related names (Maria: 'beloved'/'bitter', Maya: 'illusion' or 'water', Myra: 'admirable/sweet') - often interpreted as 'beloved' or 'admirable'. |
Mayan |
Girl |
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