Fernanda means brave journey — from the Germanic fardi (journey) and nand (brave/ready). It's the Spanish/Portuguese feminine of Ferdinand — the same root that gave Spain its most important king. One Hundred Years of Solitude features multiple Fernandas. Three syllables of brave-journey heritage, García Márquez magic, and the woman who keeps the Buendía household running.
Fernanda is the Spanish/Portuguese feminine of Ferdinand meaning brave journey. Gabriel García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude features Fernanda del Carpio as a central character. Ferdinand and Isabella united Spain.
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First recorded
Earliest known use: Spanish/Portuguese feminine form; One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967).
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Today
Fernanda remains a beloved choice, ranking #503 in the US. 19,601 babies have been named Fernanda since 1914.
◈ Sources: Behind the Name, Oxford Dictionary of First Names, SSA data
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How popular is Fernanda?
2009peak year
Fernanda first appears in the U.S. registration record in 1914. Its popularity climbed over the following decades. In 2009, 1,274 babies received the name (ranked #258). Today it sits around #503, with roughly 622 babies named Fernanda each year. Fernanda's usage has held roughly steady recently. In total, around 19,601 babies have been registered with this name since 1880.
Year-by-year registrations1880–2024 · U.S. Social Security data
Fernanda's Life Path 5 is the adventurer's number — brave-journey adventure. People named Fernanda tend to be warm, brave, and gifted at holding households together through a hundred years of solitude.
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