Weather Witch

  1. Umbra
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "shadow"
  2. Ursula
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "little female bear"
    • Description:

      A saint's name with a noteworthy literary background, including uses by Shakespeare in Two Gentlemen of Verona and Much Ado About Nothing, by Ben Johnson, Walter Scott, Longfellow, D. H. Lawrence and Neil Gaiman. In real life, her two most well known representatives are writer Ursula Le Guin and actress Ursula Andress. In literature, there is also Ursula Iguaran, a key, long-lived character in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's major work, One Hundred Years of Solitude.
  3. Ursuline
    • Vespertine
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "of the evening"
    • Xochitl
      • Origin:

        Nahuatl, Aztec
      • Meaning:

        "flower"
      • Description:

        Xochitl is a Nahuatl or Aztec floral name used in southern Mexico and pronounced SO-chee-tl or SHO-chee-tl, although sometimes the "tl" at the end is not pronounced. Internet entrepreneur Xochi Birch is probably the best-known bearer in the US – except for the Xochitl brand tortilla chips. Definitely among the most intriguing international flower names and a beautiful choice for those looking to honor Nahuatl heritage.
    • Zelda
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Griselda
      • Meaning:

        "gray fighting maid"
      • Description:

        Classified as an early beauty, Zelda has long and often been used as such for characters in books and films. Since 1986, Zelda has been a prime Nintendo name, as in the Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess.
    • Zephyrine
      • Origin:

        Feminine variation of Zephyr, Greek
      • Meaning:

        "west wind"
      • Description:

        Zephyr may not be a name often heard in the U.S., but its variations are used throughout Europe. Zephyrine, a cousin in sound and feel if not in fact to such lovely names as Severine and Seraphina, has distinctive possibilities.
    • Zillah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "shade"
      • Description:

        A light, bohemian-sounding biblical name, mentioned in the bible as a wife of Lamech, one of the first men.
    • Zoraida
      • Origin:

        Arabic
      • Meaning:

        "captivating woman"
      • Description:

        This name of a beautiful Moorish woman character in Don Quixote is rarely heard.