Tanya (name)

Tanya
Pronunciation /ˈtɑːnjə/, /ˈtænjə/
Gender Female
Language(s)
  • Aramaic
  • Ancient Greek
  • Latin
  • Russian
  • Sanskrit
  • Persian
  • Hebrew
Origin
Word/name
Meaning
  • Short form of Tatiana
  • Ancient Greek (Establisher, Decider)
  • Latin ('tatius', great)
  • Russian (Ruler, Regent)
  • Sanskrit (Daughter)
  • Persian (unique girl)
  • Hebrew/Aramaic (it was taught in Biblical teaching)
Other names
Variant form(s) LaTanya

Tanya is the Slavic hypocoristic of Tatiana. It is now quite commonly used as an independent given name in the English-speaking world.[1]

Tanya is also of Hebrew origin derived from the Aramaic term meaning 'it was taught in Baraita' which is Biblical teaching. Within Hasidic Judaism this refers to the Oral Torah. It is the first word used within the Tanya.[2]

Its popularity grew in many respects thanks to Alexander Pushkin's poem Eugene Onegin whose main character was Tatiana Larina, beloved by Onegin.

Variants include Tania (Ukrainian), Tanja (Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, German, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Dutch and Macedonian),[1] Tanea (Romanian), Táňa (Czech) or Taanya (Levant and Indian subcontinent)[3]

It is the 237th most common name in the United States according to namestatistics.com, which uses US Census data.[4]

Tanya

Fictional

Latanya

References

  1. 1 2 A Dictionary of First Names, Patrick Hanks & Flavia Hodges, Oxford University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-19-211651-7.
  2. Lehat, Sarah (2012-12-03). "Illustrated Tanya: The Iconography of a Classic Jewish Mystical Text (PHOTOS)". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2017-06-27.
  3. Samek, Ondřej Malačka, Jan. "Jméno | Táňa: 1731 | KdeJsme.cz | Četnost příjmení nebo jména v České republice". www.kdejsme.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 2017-06-27.
  4. "Tanya". namestatistics.com. Retrieved 9 October 2010.

See also

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