Character Name
Gertie
Gertie Gertie carries the plucky, no-nonsense charm of the classic English diminutive — simultaneously affectionate and capable. Characters named Gertie tend to be warm, direct, and slightly eccentric in the best sense. The name suits both the Edwardian parlour and the contemporary small town, always suggesting someone who says exactly what she means.
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Famous characters named Gertie
Gertie
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial — Melissa Mathison
The young sister of Elliott who befriends the alien E.T. and keeps his secret alongside her brothers.
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Related names
Erna
Germanic · “A Germanic and Scandinavian feminine name, a short form of names beginning with the Old High German element "arn" meaning "eagle" — such as Ernesta or Ernaline — or alternatively a feminine form of Ernst (from "earnest, serious"). The name was especially common in Germany and Scandinavia in the 19th and early 20th centuries.”
Berta
Old High German · “Berta is a short form of Roberta or Alberta, or a standalone diminutive of Bertha, which derives from the Old High German "Berahta" from "beraht" meaning "bright, shining, famous". The element "beraht" is cognate with Old English "beorht" and appears in many Germanic names. Saint Berta of Kent was a Frankish princess who married King Æthelberht of Kent in the 6th century.”
Gertrude
Germanic · “A Germanic feminine name composed of "ger" meaning "spear" and "þrúðr" meaning "strength" — thus "spear-strength" or "the strength of the spear". The name was borne by Saint Gertrude of Nivelles (626–659), the patron of travellers and gardeners, and Saint Gertrude the Great (1256–c.1302), the mystical theologian. Its literary association is dominated by Gertrude, Queen of Denmark in Shakespeare's Hamlet.”
More Old High German names
Adelheid
“A Germanic feminine name composed of "adal" meaning "noble" and "heid" meaning "kind", "type", or "appearance" — thus "of noble kind" or "noble type". It is the original Germanic form of the name that became Adelaide in French and English. The name was borne by Saint Adelaide of Italy (931–999), Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, and by Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, Queen consort of William IV of Britain.”
Waldemar
“Waldemar is an Old High German name composed of the elements "waltan" meaning "to rule, to have power" and "mari" meaning "famous, renowned". It thus means "famous ruler" or "powerful in fame". The name was borne by several medieval rulers, including Valdemar I of Denmark (the Great), who expanded Danish power in the 12th century. Scandinavian forms include Valdemar and Vladimer.”
Albrecht
“The German form of Albert, composed of the Germanic elements "adal" meaning "noble" and "beraht" or "berht" meaning "bright" or "shining" — thus "nobly bright" or "shining with nobility". The name was borne by several Habsburg emperors (Albert I, II, and III), by Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), the greatest of all German Renaissance artists, and by numerous princes of the German states.”
Dietrich
“A Germanic masculine name composed of "þeod" or "diet" meaning "people" or "folk" and "rîhhi" meaning "power", "rule", or "king" — thus "ruler of the people" or "king of the folk". Dietrich von Bern is the legendary counterpart of the historical Theodoric the Great (454–526), King of the Ostrogoths, who became one of the greatest heroes of Germanic heroic legend and appears in the Nibelungenlied, Þiðreks saga, and countless medieval German poems.”
Otfried
“A Germanic masculine name composed of "od" or "aud" meaning "wealth", "fortune", or "prosperity" and "frid" meaning "peace" — thus "peaceful wealth" or "prosperous peace". The name is historically significant as the name of Otfrid of Weissenburg (c.800–c.875), the Frankish monk who composed the Evangelienbuch, the earliest surviving major literary work in the Old High German language — making the name associated with the very origins of German literature.”
Berta
“Berta is a short form of Roberta or Alberta, or a standalone diminutive of Bertha, which derives from the Old High German "Berahta" from "beraht" meaning "bright, shining, famous". The element "beraht" is cognate with Old English "beorht" and appears in many Germanic names. Saint Berta of Kent was a Frankish princess who married King Æthelberht of Kent in the 6th century.”
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