Golda

Meaning of Golda

Golda, pronounced GOHL-duh, traces its gleam to Yiddish and ultimately to the Hebrew word for the precious metal—linguistically a distant cousin of the Persian zar that once jingled in caravans along the Silk Road. Although the name evokes bullion, its traditional intent was less about opulence than about enduring worth, a quiet promise that the bearer would keep her value when lesser alloys tarnished. In U.S. data the name shimmered brightest in the 1910s, hovering around rank 426, then slipped—much like a coin through worn silk—into the mid-800s where it has held steady for the past decade. The towering figure of Golda Meir, Israel’s famously pragmatic prime minister, lends the name a patina of statesmanship and steely resolve. Structurally, Golda is vintage yet uncluttered: two crisp syllables, an unambiguous meaning, and little temptation for creative spelling. For parents seeking a classic that resists market swings in taste, Golda behaves much like the metal itself—scarce, resilient, and never in need of polishing.

Pronunciation

Yiddish

  • Pronunced as GOHL-duh (/ɡoːl.dɑ/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

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Notable People Named Golda

Golda Meir -
Golda Rosheuvel -
Golda Schultz -
Layla Hashemi
Curated byLayla Hashemi

Assistant Editor