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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Related names


More Sanskrit names

Saraswati

Derived from Sanskrit "saras" (lake, pool, or flowing water) and "wati" (she who possesses), meaning "she who possesses the essence of the self" or "the flowing one". Saraswati is the Hindu goddess of knowledge, wisdom, music, and the arts — the consort of Brahma and patron deity of all learning.

Lakshmi

Derived from Sanskrit "lakshana" meaning "mark", "sign", or "auspicious omen". Lakshmi is the Hindu goddess of wealth, fortune, beauty, and prosperity — the consort of Vishnu and the embodiment of divine grace and abundance.

Mohan

Derived from Sanskrit "mohana" meaning "enchanting", "bewitching", or "one who fascinates". It is one of the most celebrated epithets of Krishna, who enchanted all beings with his flute and his divine beauty.

Kavya

Derived from Sanskrit "kavya" meaning "poetry" or "a poem". The word specifically refers to the elaborate Sanskrit poetic tradition, encompassing the qualities of imagination, beauty, and emotional truth that define great literary composition.

Siddharth

Derived from Sanskrit "siddha" (accomplished) and "artha" (goal or purpose), meaning "one who has achieved his goal" or "he who has attained his aim". It was the birth name of Gautama Buddha.

Durga

Derived from Sanskrit "durgā" meaning "the inaccessible" or "the invincible" — referring to a mountain fortress that cannot be stormed. Durga is one of the supreme manifestations of the Hindu goddess Shakti, the divine feminine power who vanquished the buffalo demon Mahishasura.


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