Emma aha mbụ definition

Emma aha definition: aha a na ndị ọzọ na-asụ asụsụ, mkpoputa na pronunciation variants, nwanyi na nwoke variants nke aha mbụ Emma.

Kọwaa Emma

Originally a short form of Germanic names that began with the element ermen meaning "whole" or "universal". It was introduced to England by Emma of Normandy, who was the wife both of king Ethelred II (and by him the mother of Edward the Confessor) and later of king Canute. It was also borne by an 11th-century Austrian saint, who is sometimes called Hemma.

After the Norman conquest this name became common in England. It was revived in the 18th century, perhaps in part due to Matthew Prior's poem 'Henry and Emma' (1709). It was also used by Jane Austen for the central character, the matchmaker Emma Woodhouse, in her novel 'Emma' (1816).

Bụ Emma a girl aha?

Ee, aha Emma nwere nwanyị.

Ebee ka aha mbụ Emma si bịa?

Aha Emma kasị nkịtị na English, French, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Finnish, Dutch, German, Ancient Germany.

Emma aha variants

References maka aha mbụ Emma

  • Elizabeth Gidley Withycombe, The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names (1945)
  • Ernst Förstemann, Altdeutsches namenbuch (1900), page 950