Masha
For other uses, see Masha (disambiguation).
In the Russian language, Masha (Маша) is a diminutive of Maria. It has been used as a nickname or as a pet name for women named Maria or Marie. An alternative spelling in the Latin alphabet is "Macha". In Serbo-Croatian and Slovene "Maša" is a diminutive of "Marija" but can be a given name in its own right.
Other diminutives of Maria
- Marusya (Russian: Маруся)
- Manya (Russian: Маня)
- Manyunya (Russian: Манюня)
- Manyasha (Russian: Маняша)
- Mashunya (Russian: Машуня)
- Mashuta (Russian: Машута)
- Mashenka (Russian: Машенька)
- Mar'ya (Russian: Марья)
- Mashulya (Russian: Машуля)
- Masharik (Russian: Машарик)
- Mashka (Russian: Машка)
People named Masha
- Masha Bruskina (1924-1941), Soviet partisan of the Minsk Resistance.
- Masha Gessen (born 1967), Russian and American journalist and author
- Maria (Masha) Kolenkina, Russian socialist revolutionary of the late 19th century
- Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova (1950-2003), Russian conjoined twins
- Masha Lubelsky (born 1936), Israeli former politician
- Masha Ma, Chinese fashion designer
- Masha Rasputina (born 1964), Russian pop singer
Fictional characters
- Masha and the bear (Маша и медведь) in Russian folklore
- Masha and the Bear, Russian TV series
- Masha, heroine of Pushkin's novel The Captain's Daughter
- Masha, one of the title characters in The Three Sisters (play) by Anton Chekhov
- Masha, Ilya's and Polina's daughter in The Seagull, another Chekhov play
- Masha, a character in Tokyo Mew Mew, a Japanese manga series
- Masha Rostova, Elizabeth Keen's birth name in NBC's The Blacklist
- Masha, part of Elizabeth's entourage in Young Frankenstein
- Masha, obsessed fan in The King of Comedy (1983) played by Sandra Bernhard
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.