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* [[Natalia Mashina]] (born 1997), Russian footballer
* [[Natalia Mashina]] (born 1997), Russian footballer
* [[Natália Milanová]] (born 1982), Slovakian politician
* [[Natália Milanová]] (born 1982), Slovakian politician
* [[Natalia Mohylevska]] (born 1975), Ukrainian singer
* [[Natalia Navarro]] (born 1987), Colombian beauty pageant titleholder
* [[Natalia Navarro]] (born 1987), Colombian beauty pageant titleholder
* [[Natalia Negru]] (1882–1962), Romanian poet and prose writer
* [[Natalia Negru]] (1882–1962), Romanian poet and prose writer

Revision as of 09:42, 20 June 2024

Natalia
GenderFemale
Origin
Word/nameLatin, Greek, Slavic
MeaningChristmas Day

Natalia is a female given name with the original Late Latin meaning of "Christmas Day" (cf. Latin natale domini).[1]

It is currently used in this form in Italian, Romanian, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek (spelled Ναταλία), Russian, Ukrainian (spelled Nataliia), Bulgarian and Polish.[2] Other forms and spellings include Natalie/Nathalie (Dutch, English, French, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Finnish, and Icelandic), Natálie (Czech), Natália/Nathália (Portuguese, Slovak and Hungarian), Natalya/Nataliya (Template:Lang-ru), Nataliya/Natalya (Template:Lang-uk), Natallia (Template:Lang-be), Natālija [de] (Latvian), Natalija [sl] (Cyrillic: Наталија; Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, Lithuanian, and Macedonian),[3] Natàlia (Catalan) and ნატალია (Georgian).

In Russian, a common diminutive is Natasha (Наташа).

Variants and derived forms of given name Natalia

Notable people

Fictional characters

See also

References

  1. ^ Susan Osborn (November 1999). What's in a Name?. Simon and Schuster. p. 494. ISBN 978-0-671-02555-7.
  2. ^ Natalie, BehindTheName.com
  3. ^ Names Related to Natalie, BehindTheName.com