French/English variant of Paula from Latin *paulus* ('small'), now used as a polished feminine form.
Pauleth is an uncommon name that grafts the ancient Roman name Paul onto a feminine suffix with faint Old English or Latinate overtones. Paul derives from the Roman family name *Paulus*, meaning 'small' or 'humble' — an ironic origin for a name that would go on to carry enormous weight. Saint Paul of Tarsus, arguably the most influential architect of early Christianity after Jesus himself, transformed a Roman persecutor's name into one of the world's most recognized personal identities.
The Pauline epistles, which form nearly half of the New Testament, gave the name a theological permanence that endured through medieval Europe into modernity. The '-eth' suffix has its own fascinating heritage. In Hebrew, *-et* or *-ith* is a feminine diminutive found in names like Lizbeth, Mabeth, and Elizaveth — names that carry a slightly archaic, almost fairy-tale quality.
In Old English, the suffix echoes in names like Edith and Meredith, lending an Anglo-Saxon groundedness. Pauleth sits at this intersection: Roman legacy softened and feminized through a suffix that sounds at once biblical and medieval. As a given name, Pauleth is largely rare and may have roots in Latin American naming traditions, where creative feminizations of masculine names — Paulina, Paulette, Paulinda — are more common.
It occupies a curious niche: not so unusual as to be bewildering, but distinctive enough to stand alone in any room. For parents drawn to names with historical weight and an unconventional twist, Pauleth offers a path between the familiar and the extraordinary.