Maria (given name)
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Coptic |
Meaning | Several meanings: 1) "bitter", 2) "beloved", 3)"rebelliousness", 4)"wished-for child", 5)"marine", 6)"drop of the sea", 7)"famous"[1] |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Mariah, Marie, Marija, Mariya |
Related names | Mary, Maryam, Miriam, Mari, Maya, Maris |
Maria is a feminine given name. It is given in many languages influenced by Christianity.
It was used as the feminine form of the unrelated Roman name Marius (see Maria gens),[2] and, after Christianity has spread across the Roman empire, it became the Latinised form of the name of Miriam: Mary, mother of Jesus.
Maria (Greek: Μαρία) is a form of the name used in the New Testament, standing alongside Mariam (Μαριάμ). It reflects the Syro-Aramaic name Maryam, which is in turn derived from the Biblical Hebrew name Miriam. As a result of their similarity and syncretism, the Latin original name Maria and the Hebrew-derived Maria combined to form a single name.
In Germanic languages, the name's usage is connected with the Germanic element *mar meaning "famous".
The name is also sometimes used as a male (middle) name. This was historically the case in many Central Europe countries and still is the case in countries with strong Catholic traditions, where it signified patronage of the Virgin Mary (French-speakers often did the same with Marie).
In the Arabic language the name Mariam (مريم) (also written: Meryem, Mariya) means either "white beautiful woman" or "white cow" or "a little bird with the same size as a pigeon",[3] and it is quite popular in North Africa. One of the feminine Sahaba had the name Maria, Maria the Coptic.
Variants and usage[edit]
Maria was a frequently given name in southern Europe even in the medieval period. In addition to the simple name, there arose a tradition of naming girls after specific titles of Mary, feast days associated with Mary and specific Marian apparitions (such as María de los Dolores, María del Pilar, María del Carmen etc., whence the derived given names of Dolores, Pilar, Carmen etc.). By contrast, in northern Europe the name only rose to popularity after the Reformation.[4]
Because the name is so frequent in Christian tradition, a tradition of giving compound names has developed, with a number of such compounds themselves becoming very popular. Examples, among numerous others, include:
- Anna + Maria (Anne-Marie, Marianne)
- Maria + Luisa (Marie-Louise)
- Maria + Antonia (Maria Antonia, French Marie-Antoinette)
- Maria + Helena (Italian Maria Elena, Spanish María Elena)
- Maria + Teresa (Maria Theresa, French Marie Thérèse)
- Maria + {Issa} Marissa or Marisa Christian Nazareth
- Maria + {Saiyra} Mary-Saiyra or Saiyra Mary Christian Antioch
As a feminine given name, Maria ranked 109th in the United States as of 2015, down from rank 31 held during 1973–1975.[5] The English form Mary was at rank 214 as of 2015, after a much steeper decline down from being raked first consistently during 1880–1968.[6]
Spelling variants of Maria include: Mária (Hungarian, Slovakian), María (Greek, Icelandic, Spanish), Máire and Muire (Irish), Marya (transliterated from Cyrillic), Marija (Latvian, but also used in other Balto-Slavic languages) and Maria (Polish). Due to a very strong devotion of Irish and Polish Catholics to the Blessed Virgin Mary, a special exception is made for two other forms of her name – Muire and Maryja: no one else may take that name, similar to the way the name Jesus is not used in most languages. The English form Mary is derived via French Marie.
A great number of hypocoristic forms are in use in numerous languages. Cyrillic Maryam and Miriam have numerous variants, such as
- Mariami (Georgian)
- Mariamma, biblical Mariamme, Mariamne
- Məryəm (Azerbaijani)
- Meryem (Kurdish, Turkish)
- Myriam (French)
The spelling in Semitic abjads is mrym: Aramaic ܡܪܝܡ, Hebrew מרים, Arabic مريم.
Cyrillic spellings are Мария (Maríja) (Russian, Bulgarian), Марыя (Marýja) (Belarusian), Марія (Maríja) (Ukrainian) and Марија (Marija) (Serbian, Macedonian).
Georgian uses მარიამ (Mariam) and მარია (Maria); Armenian has Մարիամ (Mariam).
Chinese has adopted the spelling 瑪麗 (simplified 玛丽, pinyin Mǎlì).
The variant Mariah (usually pronounced /məˈraɪə/) was rarely given in the United States prior to the 1990s, when it bounced in popularity, from rank 562 in 1989 to rank 62 in 1998, in imitation of the name of singer Mariah Carey (whose Vision of Love topped the charts in 1990).
People[edit]
- Maaria Eira, Finnish opera singer and actress
- Maria of Russia (several people)
- Maria al-Qibtiyya
- Maria I of Portugal (1734-1816), Queen of Portugal
- María Conchita Alonso (born 1957), American singer/songwriter and actress
- Maria Ahtisa Manalo, Miss International Philippines 2018
- Maria Andrejczyk (born 1996), Polish jevelin thrower
- Maria Ângela Carrascalão, East Timorese politician
- Maria II of Portugal (1818-1853), Queen of Portugal
- Maria Aasen-Svensrud, Norwegian politician
- María Laura Abalo (born 1981), Argentine rower
- Maria Abashova (born 1983), Russian ballet dancer
- Maria Abbebù Viarengo (born 1949), Ethiopian-born writer living in Italy
- Maria Abbey (1816–1903), nurse during the American Civil War
- Maria Abbracchio, Italian pharmacologist
- Maria Abdy (1797–1867), English poet
- María Abel (born 1974), Spanish long-distance runner
- María Abella (1863–1926), Uruguayan feminist
- María Abradelo (born 1969), Spanish actress
- Maria Abrahamsson (born 1963), Swedish lawyer, journalist and politician
- Maria Abramović (born 1987), Croatian tennis player
- Maria T. Accardi, American academic
- María Acosta (born 1991), Venezuelan freestyle wrestler
- María Teresa Adames (born 1941), Mexican diver
- María Adánez (born 1976), Spanish actress and filmmaker
- Maria Adelborg (1849–1940), Swedish artist
- Maria Lourdes Afiuni, Venezuelan judge
- Maria Ager, Austrian chess player
- Maria Agresta (born 1978), Italian operatic soprano
- Maria Theresia Ahlefeldt (1755–1810), German-born aristocrat and Danish composer
- Maria Ahm (born 1998), Danish long-distance runner
- Maria Aitken (born 1945), English theatre director, actress and writer
- Maria Ajzensztadt (1923–1942), Polish singer
- Maria Akraka (born 1966), Swedish middle-distance runner
- Maria Aksenova (born 1969), Russian media personality
- María Alanoca (born 1960), Bolivian politician
- Maria Alba (1905–1999), Spanish-American actress
- Maria Albert (born 1985), Estonian swimmer
- Maria Albuleț (1932–2005), Romanian chess player
- María José Alcalá (born 1971), Mexican diver
- Maria Alda Nogueira (1923–1998), Portuguese communist, feminist, anti-fascist activist and politician
- Maria Alexander, American writer
- Maria Alexandrova (born 1978), Russian ballet dancer
- Maria Alexandru (born 1939), Romanian table tennis player
- Maria Alfero (1922–2001), Italian sprinter
- María Alharilla (born 1990), Spanish footballer
- Maria Allash (born 1976), Russian ballet dancer
- Maria Almas-Dietrich (1892–1971), German art dealer
- Maria Almasri (born 2004), Israeli footballer
- María Almenta (born 1997), Spanish model
- Maria Laura Almirão (born 1977), Brazilian sprinter
- Maria Aloni, Italian philosopher
- Maria Alos (1973–2011), artist
- Maria Suelen Altheman (born 1988), Brazilian judoka
- Maria Altmann (1916–2011), Austrian-American Jewish refugee
- María Antonieta Alva (born 1985), Peruvian politician
- Maria Alvarez (several people)
- Maria Alves (several people)
- Maria Alyokhina (born 1988), Russian political activist and musician
- Maria Amalia (several people)
- Maria Amaral (several people)
- Maria Amelie (born 1985), Russian-born writer and blogger
- Maria Laura Amorim (born 1932), Portuguese gymnast
- María Amuchástegui (1953–2017), Argentine television fitness instructor
- Maria Andergast (1912–1995), German actress
- Maria Andersson (several people)
- Maria Anderton (born 1969), Kiwi association footballer
- Maria Andrade (born 1993), Cape Verdean taekwondo athlete
- Maria Andrade (born 1958), Cape Verde food scientist
- Maria Andreae (1550–1631), German pharmacist
- Maria Andrejczyk (born 1996), Polish javelin thrower
- Maria Andreu (1801–after 1860), American US Coastguard employee
- Maria Andreyeva (1868–1953), Russian/Soviet actress and Bolshevik administrator
- Maria Angélica, Brazilian basketball player
- Maria Angelico, Australian actress, writer and producer
- Maria Angelova (1925–1999), Bulgarian Esperantist and author
- Maria Àngels Anglada (1920–1999), Spanish poet and novelist
- Maria Anikanova (1916–2005), Soviet speed skater
- Maria Annus (born 1979), Estonian actress
- María Añó, Spanish rhythmic gymnast
- Maria Ansorge (1880–1955), German politician
- Maria Antonescu (1892–1964), Romanian socialite and philanthropist
- Maria Antoniou (born 1964), Swedish actress
- Maria N. Antonopoulou (born 1946), Greek sociologist
- Maria Anzai (1953–2014), Japanese idol
- Maria Apollonio (1919–1990), Italian sprinter
- Maria Apostolidi (born 1988), Greek artistic gymnast
- Maria Aragon (born 2000), Canadian singer of Filipino descent
- Maria Eduarda Arakaki (born 2003), Brazilian rhythmic gymnast
- María Araujo (1950–2020), Spanish costume designer
- María Araújo (born 1997), Spanish basketball player
- Maria Araújo Khan (born 1964), American judge
- Maria Arbatova (born 1957), Russian and Soviet writer, politician and feminist
- María Arceo, Cuban softball player
- Maria Archer (1899–1982), Portuguese writer and activist
- Maria Angela Ardinghelli (1730–1825), Italian mathematician, physicist and translator
- Maria Areosa (born 1984), Portuguese triathlete
- María Argüelles Arellano (born 1963), Mexican politician
- María Arias Staines (1941–2023), Mexican politician
- María Fernanda Aristizábal (born 1997), Colombian model and beauty pageant titleholder
- Maria Arkhipova (born 1983), Russian heavy metal vocalist
- María Armand (1917–2005), Argentine dancer, stage and film actress
- Maria Armanda (born 1974), Portuguese child singing sensation
- Maria Armoudian, American singer-songwriter
- Maria Arnal (born 1987), Spanish singer
- Maria Arndt (1929–2000), Polish sprinter
- Maria Arnholm (born 1958), Swedish politician
- Maria Aronsson (born 1983), Swedish former footballer
- Maria Arredondo (born 1985), Norwegian singer
- Maria Arrillaga, Puerto Rican writer
- Maria Arrua (born 1999), Paraguayan swimmer
- Maria Arruvaia, Mozambican politician
- Maria Artemieva (born 1993), Russian figure skater
- Maria Artini (1894–1951), Italian engineer
- María Arzú, Guatemalan businessperson
- Maria Antonietta Avanzo (1889–1977), Italian racetrack driver
- Maria Angelica Ayala (born 1964), Filipina dressage rider
- María Azambuya (1944–2011), Uruguayan actress and theatre director
- Maria Bamford (born 1970), American stand-up comedian, actress, and voice actress
- Maria Alice Barroso (1926–2012), Brazilian novelist
- María Bazo (born 1998), Peruvian windsurfer
- Maria E. Beasley, American inventor
- Maria Beig (1920–2018), German author
- Maria Arena Bell (born 1963), American television writer and freelance writer
- Maria Bello (born 1967), American actress and writer
- María Belón (born 1966), Spanish physician and motivational speaker
- Maria Antonietta Beluzzi (1930–1997), Italian actress
- Maria Berényi (born 1959), Romanian Hungarian historian and poet
- Maria Antonia Berrios (born 1977), American politician
- Maria Elisabeth Bes (1882–1938), Dutch chemical engineer, city councillor in Delft
- María Bolívar (born 1975), Venezuelan politician
- María Angélica Bosco (1909–2006), Argentinian novelist, translator and essayist
- Maria Antonia Braile, Albanian arbëreshë writer
- Maria Antonia Branconi (1746–1793), German royal mistress
- Maria Brink (born 1977), American singer and songwriter
- Maria Bucur (born 1968), Romanian-American historian
- Maria Callas (1923–1977), Greek-American soprano
- Maria Callani (1778–1803), Italian 18th century portrait painter active in Parma[7]
- Maria Aurèlia Campany (1918–1991), Spanish novelist, playwright and essayist
- Maria Antònia Canals (1930–2022), Catalan teacher
- Maria Cantwell (born 1958), U.S. Senator
- Maria Ângela Carrascalão, East Timorese journalist, author, university teacher and former minister
- Maria Arménia Carrondo (born 1948), Portuguese chemical engineer specializing in crystallography
- Maria Andrea Casamayor (1720–1780), Spanish mathematician and teacher
- María Marcos Cedillo Salas (1910-1933), first female pilot in Mexico
- Maria Aldana Cetra (born 1980), Argentine cyclist
- Maria Amélia Chaves (1911–2017) Portuguese civil engineer
- Maria Christina (several people)
- Maria Cole (1922–2012), American jazz singer
- María Antonieta Collins (born 1952), Mexican journalist and author
- Maria Colwell (1965–1973), British female murder victim
- María Angélica Cristi (born 1941), Chilean politician
- Maria Dallas, New Zealand singer
- Maria Damanaki (born 1952), Greek politician
- Maria Angela Danzì (born 1957), Italian politician
- Maria d'Apparecida (1926–2017), Brazilian opera singer
- Maria Darling, British voice actress
- Maria Antonieta de Brito (born 1969), Brazilian politician
- María Alicia de la Rosa López (born 1963), Mexican politician
- Maria de Lourdes Martins Cruz, East Timorese religious sister
- Maria Alice de Mendonça, Brazilian musician
- Maria de Vasconcelos (born 1970), Portuguese psychiatrist, singer and songwriter
- María Alicia Delgado (born 1947), Mexican actress and comedian
- Maria Angela Caterina d'Este (1656–1722), Princess of Carignano
- Maria Adela Diaz, Guatemalan artist
- María Angélica Díaz del Campo (born 1965), Mexican politician
- Maria Angelina Dique Enoque (born 1953), Mozambican politician
- Maria do Céu Sarmento, East Timorese politician
- Maria Domingas Alves, East Timorese politician
- Maria Alicia Dominguez, Argentinian poet, novelist and essayist
- Maria Durhuus (born 1977), Danish politician
- Maria Edgeworth (1768–1849), Anglo-Irish writer of adults' and children's literature
- Maria Aida Episcopo (born 1963), Italian politician
- María Amparo Escandón (born 1957), American film producer
- Maria Luisa Escolar, Colombian pediatrician
- María Escudero-Escribano (born 1983), Spanish chemist
- Maria Louise Eve (1842–1900), American poet
- Maria Ewing (1950–2022), American opera singer
- Maria Farantouri (born 1947), Greek singer
- María Fernanda Di Giacobbe (born 1964), Venezuelan chocolatier
- Maria Amélia Ferreira (born 1955), Portuguese professor of medicine
- Maria Foser, Liechtensteiner politician
- Maria Fyfe (1938–2020), Scottish politician
- María Esther García López (born, 1948), poet, writer; president, Asturias Writers Association
- Maria Anna von Genzinger (1754–1793), Viennese musician
- Maria Aparecida Godoy, Brazilian comic artist
- Maria Goretti, a victim of crime and saint
- María la Grande (c. 1789–1841), prominent Tehuelche leader of the early 19th century
- Maria Guyomar de Pinha (1664–1728), Siamese cook
- Maria Harfanti (born 1992), Miss World Indonesia 2015
- Maria Anne Hirschmann (1926–2024), American author and evangelist
- Maria Höfl-Riesch (born 1984), German alpine skier
- María Ángela Holguín (born 1963), Colombian politician and diplomat
- María Holly (born 1932), widow of rock and roll pioneer Buddy Holly
- María Angélica Idrobo (1890–1956), Ecuadorian writer and feminist activist
- María Antonia Iglesias (1945–2014), Spanish writer and journalist
- Maria Iliou (born 1960) Greek film director, scriptwriter and producer
- Maria James (1793–1868), Welsh-born American poet
- Maria Wanda Jastrzębska (1924–1988), Polish electronics engineer, taught at Silesian University of Technology and Opole University of Technology
- Maria Jane Jewsbury (1800–1833), English writer, poet, literary reviewer
- María José (several people)
- Maria Kanellis (born 1982), American professional wrestler
- Maria Kekkonen, Finnish erotic actress
- Maria Brace Kimball (1852–1933), American educator, elocutionist, writer
- Maria Kochetkova (born 1984), Russian ballet dancer
- Maria Aurora von Königsmarck (1662–1728), Swedish and German noblewoman
- Maria Kovrigina (1910–1995), Russian physician and Soviet minister of health
- Maria Kowroski (born 1976), American ballet dancer
- Maria Antonina Kratochwil (1881–1942), Polish Roman Catholic religious sister and martyr
- Maria Lampadaridou Pothou (1933–2023), Greek novelist, poet and playwright
- Maria Elise Turner Lauder (1833–1922), Canadian writer
- Maria Lauterbach (1987–2007), American murder victim
- Maria Aracely Leiva (born 1967), Honduran politician
- Maria Alzira Lemos (1919–2005), Portuguese feminist and parliamentary deputy
- Maria Lioudaki (1894–1947), Greek educator, folklorist, and resistance fighter
- Maria Lohela (born 1978), Finnish politician
- Maria Antonietta Loi, Italian physicist
- Maria Angelina Lopes Sarmento (born 1978), East Timorese politician
- Maria Antonieta Lorente, geologist
- Maria White Lowell (1821–1853), American poet, abolitionist
- Maria Aloysia Löwenfels (1915–1942), German religious sister
- Maria Lugones (1944–2020), American philosopher
- Maria Lynn Ehren (born 1992), Thai singer and model
- Maria Antonietta Macciocchi (1922–2007), Italian politician and journalist
- María Angélica Magaña Zepeda (born 1975), Mexican politician
- Maria Laura Mainetti (1939–2000), Italian Catholic sister and murder victim
- María Emma Mannarelli (born 1954), Peruvian feminist writer, historian, professor
- Maria Mandl (1912–1948), Austrian Nazi SS commandant of the female camp at Auschwitz concentration camp executed for war crimes
- Maria Rika Maniates (1937–2011), Canadian musicologist
- Maria Rosaria Manieri (born 1943), Italian academic and socialist politician
- María Marcano de León, Puerto Rican government official
- Maria Amélia Martins-Loução, biologist and professor
- Maria Mazina (born 1964), Russian Olympic champion épée fencer
- Maria Alberta Menéres (1930–2019), Portuguese writer
- Maria Montessori (1870–1952), Italian educator
- Maria Anna Mozart (1751–1829), Austrian musician
- Maria Naganawa (長縄 まりあ, born 1995), Japanese voice actress
- Maria Nikiforova (1885–1919), Ukrainian anarchist partisan
- María Beatriz Nofal, Argentine economist and civil servant
- Maria Antònia Oliver Cabrer (1946–2022), Spanish writer
- María José Orellana (born 1981), Guatemalan beach volleyball player
- Maria Ozawa (小澤 マリア, born 1986), Japanese actress
- Princess Maria Pia of Bourbon-Parma (born 1934)
- Maria Antónia Palla (born 1933), Portuguese feminist, journalist and abortion-rights activist
- Maria Palmer (1917–1981), Austrian-born American actress
- Maria Pappa (born 1971), Swiss politician
- María Amparo Pascual López, Cuban pharmacologist and medical doctor
- Maria Aparecida Pedrossian (1934–2022), Brazilian socialite
- María Angélica Pérez (1897–1932), Argentinian nun
- María Luisa Pérez-Soba (1930–2021) first woman agricultural engineer in Galicia
- Maria Antonietta Perino, Italian aerospace engineer
- Maria Petri (1939–2022), English association football supporter
- Maria Angela Picco (1867–1921), Italian Roman Catholic nun
- Maria Antonietta Picconi (1869–1926), Italian composer and pianist
- Maria Adeodata Pisani (1806–1855), Maltese beautified nun
- Maria Antonieta Pons (1922–2004), Cuban-born Mexican actress
- Maria Posobchuk (1890–1992), Ukrainian weaver
- Maria Adriana Prolo (1908–1991), Italian historian
- Maria Radnoti-Alföldi (1926–2022), Hungarian-German archaeologist
- Maria Rahajeng (born 1991), Miss World Indonesia 2014
- María Angélica Ramírez Luna (born 1975), Mexican politician
- María Angels Ramón-Llin (born 1963), Spanish politician
- Maria Rasputin (1898–1977), memoirist
- Maria Angelica Razzi, Italian sculptor
- María Teresa Rejas (born 1946), Spanish politician
- Maria Ressa (born 1963), Filipino-American author, journalist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate
- Maria Reynolds (1768–1828), wife of James Reynolds
- Maria Angélica Ribeiro (1829–1880), Brazilian playwright
- Maria Sakkari (born 1995), Greek professional tennis player
- María Elena Salinas, American broadcast journalist, news anchor, and author
- Maria Antònia Salvà I Ripoll (1869–1958), Mallorcan poet and translator
- Maria Amélia Santos (born 1952), Portuguese politician
- María Antonia Santos Plata (1782–1819), Neogranadine peasant, rebel leader and heroine
- Maria Adeline Alice Schweistal (1864–1950), Belgium-born Dutch artist
- Maria Selena (born 1990), Indonesian beauty pageant titleholder who won Puteri Indonesia 2011
- Maria Sharapova (born 1987), Russian professional tennis player
- Maria Shriver (born 1955), American journalist and activist
- Maria Simonds-Gooding (born 1939), Indian-born Anglo-Irish artist
- María Alicia Sinigaglia (born 1964), Argentine fencer
- Maria Antónia Siza (1940–1973), Portuguese artist
- Maria Aparecida Soares Ruas (born 1948), Brazilian mathematician
- Maria Alma Solis (born 1956), American entomologist
- Maria Brewster Brooks Stafford (1809–1896), American educator
- Maria Arkadyevna Stolypina, Russian courtier
- Maria Strömkvist (born 1964), Swedish politician
- Maria Tenazi (1903–1930), Soviet Armenian silent film actress
- Maria Theresa (several people)
- María Amelia Torres (1934–2011), Argentine botanist
- Maria von Trapp (1905–1987), Austrian-born American singer
- María Antonia Trujillo (born 1960), Spanish politician
- María Valverde (born 1987), Spanish actress
- Maria Eulália Vares, Brazilian mathematical statistician and probability theorist
- Maria Vasilkova (born 1978), Russian politician
- María Araceli Vázquez Camacho (born 1948), Mexican politician
- Maria Alice Vergueiro (1935–2020), Brazilian actress
- Maria Chantal Videla (born 2002), Filipino-Argentine actress, model and singer of K-pop girl group Lapillus
- Maria Andrea Virgilio (born 1996), Italian Paralympic archer
- María Argelia Vizcaíno, Cuban activist and writer
- Maria Walliser (born 1963), Swiss alpine skier
- Maria Watkins (1918–2010) defence electronics engineer, lecturer and President of the Women's Engineering Society.
- Maria Torrence Wishart (1893 – 1982), Canadian medical illustrator and the founder of the University of Toronto's Art as Applied to Medicine program
- Maria Woodworth-Etter (1844–1924), American Evangelist and Faith Healer
- Maria Yusuf, Ethiopian activist
- Maria Zaharescu (born 1938), Romanian chemist
- Maria Zandbang (1886–1972), Polish equestrian
Fictional characters[edit]
- Maria, a fictional character played by Laura Nicole in the British web series Corner Shop Show
- Maria, a villain character in the tokusatsu Chōjin Sentai Jetman
- Maria, the youngest princess of Macedon in the Fire Emblem video game series.
- Maria, a character from the American television series Sesame Street
- Maria, a young Pakistani girl from the animated film Iqbal: Bambini Senza Paura
- Maria (West Side Story), the main female protagonist from the musical West Side Story
- Lady Maria of the Astral Clocktower, a boss character from The Old Hunters DLC for the video game Bloodborne
- Maria Calavera, a supporting character in the animated web series RWBY
- María Clara, a character from the novel Noli Me Tángere (novel) by Filipino writer and activist José Rizal
- Grace Maria Fleed, a character from the anime Grendizer.
- Maria Fritz, the daughter of Ymir Fritz, namesake of Wall Maria and a minor character in the anime and manga Attack on Titan
- Maria Hojo, a supporting character from Suite PreCure
- Maria Jackson, a character from The Sarah Jane Adventures
- Maria Kasugano, a minor character from Yes! PreCure 5
- Maria Renard, a character in the Castlevania video game series
- Maria Tobari, one of protagonists from Psycho Dream
- Maria Robotnik, a character in the Sonic the Hedgehog video game series
- Maria Saotome, a minor character from Soaring Sky! Pretty Cure
- Maria von Trapp, the main female protagonist of the musical The Sound of Music
- Maria Wong, a character from the Canadian animated television series Braceface
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ "Maria". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
- ^ Morales Cara, Manuel (2005). La Esclavitud en las Colonias Romanas de Andalucia (PDF) (PhD thesis) (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada. ISBN 84-338-3382-0. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 March 2022. Retrieved 6 April 2007.[page needed]
- ^ الشناوي, عيد (1 January 2022). آراء الکوفيين في مبنيات الأسماء وأثرها الدلالي في تفسير القرطبي. مجلة علوم العربية والقرآن الكريم. 2 (3): 177–192. doi:10.21608/malu.2022.99255.1006. ISSN 2786-0000.
- ^ Hough, Carole; Izdebska, Daria, eds. (2016). The Oxford Handbook of Names and Naming. Oxford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-0199656431.
- ^ "Maria". behindthename.com. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
- ^ "Mary". behindthename.com. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
- ^ Lavagetto Ceschi, Paola (1973). "Callani, Gaetano". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 16 – via Treccani.
- Given names
- Italian feminine given names
- Romanian feminine given names
- Russian feminine given names
- Slovak feminine given names
- Spanish feminine given names
- Portuguese feminine given names
- Swiss feminine given names
- Pakistani feminine given names
- Slavic feminine given names
- Scandinavian feminine given names
- Ukrainian feminine given names
- German feminine given names
- Dutch feminine given names
- Georgian feminine given names
- Greek feminine given names
- Armenian feminine given names
- Feminine given names
- Bulgarian feminine given names
- Danish feminine given names
- Norwegian feminine given names
- Icelandic feminine given names
- Swedish feminine given names
- Finnish feminine given names
- Filipino feminine given names
- Belarusian feminine given names
- Circassian feminine given names
- Polish feminine given names
- Serbian feminine given names
- Slovene feminine given names
- Croatian feminine given names
- English feminine given names