Gender | female |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Europe |
Region of origin | Russia |
Inna (Инна) is a European given name. It was the name of an early East Orthodox male martyr (see ru:Инна, Пинна и Римма), but is currently used as a feminine name only.[1][2] In ancient Greece, the name Ἴννα (Inna) is also attested[3] (probably from ἴννην innen, meaning "little girl"[4]), however a connection with the Russian Inna has not been confirmed.
People named Inna
- Inna (born Elena Alexandra Apostoleanu, 1986), Romanian singer
- Inna Bulkina (1963–2021), Ukrainian literary critic, writer and editor
- Inna Braverman, Israeli entrepreneur and businesswoman
- Inna Brayer, amateur ballroom dancer
- Inna Churikova (born 1943), Soviet and Russian actress
- Inna Derusova (1970–2022), Ukrainian military medic
- Inna Dorofeieva (born 1965), Ukrainian ballerina
- Inna Gaponenko (born 1976), Ukrainian chess player
- Inna Gliznuta (born 1973), Moldovan Olympic high jumper
- Inna Lisnyanskaya, Armenian Orthodox and Jewish Russian poet from USSR, later Russia
- Inna Meiman-Kitrossky (1932–1987), refusenik
- Inna Modja (born 1984), Malian-French female singer and model
- Inna Mozhevitina (born 1985), Kazakh biathlete
- Inna Osypenko-Radomska (born 1982), Ukrainian/Azerbaijani sprint kayaker
- Inna Palacios (born 1994), Filipino football player
- Inna Poluškina (born 1984), Latvian long-distance runner
- Inna Sovsun, Ukrainian professor and politician
- Inna Tumanyan (1929-2005), Soviet-Armenian film director
- Inna Vernikov (born 1984), American politician
- Inna Yaitskaya (born 1979), Russian Olympic swimmer
- Inna Yoffe (born 1988), Israeli Olympic synchronized swimmer
- Inna Zhukova (born 1986), Belarusian Olympic rhythmic gymnast
- Inna Zubkovskaya (1923–2001), Soviet and Russian ballerina
See also
- Inna (disambiguation)
- All pages with titles beginning with Inna
References
- ↑ "20knames.com". Archived from the original on 2017-02-07. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
- ↑ MN Weekly (Russia) Moscow News Weekly Archived 2008-06-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on May 18, 2008
- ↑ Lexicon of Greek Personal Names, Oxford
- ↑ ἴννην, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus Digital Library
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.