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Pages in category "Albanian feminine given names" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Pages in category "Albanian given names" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. Z. Zedi (name)
Albanian names are names that are used by Albanians in Albania, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, or the diaspora.In Albania, a full name usually consists of a given name (Albanian: emri); the given name of the individual's father (Albanian: atësia), which is seldom included except in official documents; and a (most commonly patrilineal) family name or surname (Albanian: mbiemri).
The Albanians (Albanian: Shqiptarët) and their country Albania (Shqipëria) have been identified by many ethnonyms.The native endonym is Shqiptar.The name "Albanians" (Latin: Albanenses/Arbanenses) was used in medieval Greek and Latin documents that gradually entered European languages from which other similar derivative names emerged. [1]
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Shpresa is an Albanian female name meaning "hope" (shpresë). People bearing the name Shpresa include: Shpresa Gjongecaj (born 1952), Albanian archaeologist and numismatist; Shpresa Kureta (born 1959), Albanian ambassador to Poland; Shpresa Lleshaj, member of Swedish pop duo Flora Cash
Jana is the spelling of several unrelated given names.. In Albanian, short for Jehona which means "echo", other short names include Jona, Ana, Hona; In Arabic Jana, is a noun which means "to Earn" or "to Reap" (Essentially making the name the Arabic equivalent of the name Theresa) and is used as a female name, but is pronounced as Janaa
She was born in Greece into a noble family: her father was a Latin knight named Michael and her mother was Albanian. Her name was Theodolinde Trasci. After she became a nun in Constantinople, she changed it into Laura, eventually rising to become an abbess. She was martyred by the Ottoman Turks who took Constantinople on 29 May 1453.