Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Geeta

Meaning — Derived from Sanskrit "gita" meaning "song" or "that which has been sung". The name is most powerfully associated with the Bhagavad Gita ("Song of God"), the sacred dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna that is the philosophical heart of the Mahabharata.·Sanskrit origin·Female·GEE-tah

Geeta Through its association with the Bhagavad Gita, Geeta carries the weight of divine wisdom delivered in song. Characters with this name are often portrayed as repositories of quiet but profound understanding — women who speak simply but whose words have the quality of revealed truth, drawing on ancestral wisdom that runs deeper than formal education.

Best genres for Geeta

Literary FictionPhilosophical FictionContemporary FictionFamily Drama

Famous characters named Geeta

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

GeetaGitaGeetha

Pairs well with

Geeta SharmaGeeta RaoGeeta NairGeeta IyerGeeta Gupta

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More Sanskrit names

Dhruv

Derived from Sanskrit "dhruva" meaning "immovable", "fixed", or "the Pole Star". In Hindu mythology, Dhruv is the boy-devotee of Vishnu who, through unwavering meditation, was granted an eternal place as the North Star.

Kali

From the Sanskrit Kāli, the feminine form of Kāla, meaning "black," "time," or "death." Kali is one of the most powerful deities in Hindu theology — the goddess of time, change, and destruction, but also of liberation and transformation. As a given name it is used in Indian and Hindu communities, and also in Finnish as a masculine form of Kalle (Karl).

Sita

Derived from Sanskrit meaning "furrow" — Sita was found in a furrow of ploughed earth by King Janaka, and her name evokes the earth's fertility and nurturing power. In Hindu tradition she is an avatar of Lakshmi and the noble consort of Rama in the Ramayana.

Aarav

Derived from Sanskrit meaning "peaceful", "calm", or "without noise". The root "rava" means sound or noise, and with the negative prefix the name suggests a serene stillness — the peace that follows the storm.

Arjun

Derived from Sanskrit "arjuna" meaning "white", "clear", or "shining". In Hindu tradition, Arjun is the heroic archer-prince of the Mahabharata, one of the five Pandava brothers, whose dialogue with Krishna forms the sacred Bhagavad Gita.

Ravi

Directly from Sanskrit meaning "the sun". Ravi is one of the twelve names of the sun god Surya and one of the oldest solar names in use across the Indian subcontinent, spanning Tamil, Hindi, Kannada, and Telugu traditions.


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