Modern invented name, possibly a blend of Ken and the suffix -da, or a variant of Kendra.
Kenda moves in the orbit of Kendra, a name with contested but compelling origins. One prominent theory roots it in Old Welsh and Old English territory: the Cumbrian place name Kendale or Kendal derives from the River Kent plus "dale," meaning the valley of the Kent River. This regional English toponym became a surname, and surnames became given names — a pattern that has generated hundreds of English forenames over centuries.
A competing folk etymology links the name to a Celtic root meaning "greatest champion" or "high and fair." Kendra entered mainstream American usage in the mid-twentieth century, riding the wave of -ndra names that became fashionable in the 1950s through 1970s — Sandra, Cassandra, Wanda. Kenda is the slightly softer, more streamlined variant, dropping the final vowel-stop in favor of a cleaner close.
It has been used across African American naming traditions in particular, where it joined a constellation of melodious names that prioritized sound and individual distinctiveness over historical precedent. Kenda has never been a chart-topper, which gives it a quiet exclusivity. It belongs to a category of names that feel simultaneously invented and grounded — parents hear it as both familiar and fresh. The -a ending gives it a warmth and femininity, while the hard "K" opener provides a note of strength and decisiveness.