Eda | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | [ˈeda] |
Gender | Female |
Language(s) | Old Norse, Turkish, Japanese |
Origin | |
Meaning | wealthy, mannerly |
Other names | |
Related names | Ada, Edy, Edi, Ida, Oda and Uda, Edanur |
the name is particularly popular nowadays in Turkey |
"Eda" [1] is a name that has arisen independently in multiple regions.
Its oldest appearance dates back to the Old Norse, and subsequently, Old English language (pronounced eɪ-dɑː), with meaning "strife for wealth"). Eda was a goddess in northern mythology, the Guardian of Time and Wealth. Also a variant of Edith, Edna and Hedwig. It is sometimes considered the shortened version of the male name "Edwin". Eda has 2 variant forms: Edda and Ede. In the United States, Eda is a fairly common first name for women (#1953 out of 4276) but an uncommon surname or last name for all people. (1990 U.S. Census) Eda and Edda were popular in Italy before the fall of Fascism, as Mussolini's daughter was named Edda.[2]
The has gained popularity in Turkey, where the pronunciation changes to ɛː-dɑ with stress on an elongated open "e" sound. In Turkish it means "good mannered and polite". Several public figures are named Eda.
In Japan it is a common last name. Eda also appears high in name rankings for Scandinavian states such as Sweden.[3]
This page or section lists people that share the same given name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. |