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* [[Amanda Swafford]] (born 1978), former contestant of ''America's Next Top Model, Cycle 3'' and model
* [[Amanda Swafford]] (born 1978), former contestant of ''America's Next Top Model, Cycle 3'' and model
* [[Amanda Tapping]] (born 1965), English-born Canadian actress
* [[Amanda Tapping]] (born 1965), English-born Canadian actress
* [[Amanda Marie Coy]] (born 1994), The coolest person you will ever meet

===Other===
===Other===
* [[Amanda Forsyth]] (born 1966), Canadian cellist
* [[Amanda Forsyth]] (born 1966), Canadian cellist

Revision as of 20:17, 15 April 2011

Amanda
Pronunciationah-MAN-Dah
GenderFemale
Origin
Word/nameLatin
Meaning"(female) that must be loved","worthy of love"
Region of originEngland
Other names
Related namesMandy, Miranda, Amandus, Amandine

Amanda is a Latin female gerundive name meaning "having to be loved," "deserving to be loved," or, simply, "worthy of love."

The name "Amanda" first appeared in 1212 on a birth record from Warwickshire, England, and five centuries later the name was popularized by poets and playwrights.[1]

In the United States, "Amanda" slowly became more prominent from the 1930s to the 1960s, ranking among the top 200 baby names.[2] It jumped into the top 10 in the mid-1970s, likely because of Barry Manilow's 1974 No. 1 hit song "Mandy," a nickname for Amanda.[citation needed]

From 1976 to 1995, "Amanda" ranked in the ten most popular female baby names in the United States. The name was most popular from 1978 to 1992, when it ranked in the top 4. At its prime, in 1980, it was the second most popular. In 2009, "Amanda" ranked number 166. It was still ranked among the top ten names given to girls born in Puerto Rico in 2009. The name is also currently popular in Sweden, where it ranked twentieth for girls born in 2009, down five places from 2008, when it was ranked fifteenth. It is also popular in Swedish-speaking families in Finland, where it ranked among the top ten names for girls born to ethnic Swedes.

People

Athletes

Actresses, singers and models

Other

  • Amanda Forsyth (born 1966), Canadian cellist
  • Amanda Hearst (born 1984), American socialite, fashion model, and heiress to William Randolph Hearst's media empire
  • Amanda Hesser (born 1972), American food writer, editor and cookbook author
  • Amanda Knox (born 1987), American woman imprisoned in Italy for the murder of Meredith Kercher
  • Amanda Lang (born 1970), Canadian journalist and senior business correspondent for CBC News
  • Amanda Simpson (born 1961), Senior Technical Adviser to the U.S. Department of Commerce and first openly transgender woman political appointee
  • Amanda Vanstone (born 1952), former Australian politician and current Ambassador to Italy

Fictional characters

See also

Footnotes