Variants The name of the mythological figure is an old Albanian word. Therefore, several Albanian dialectal variants exist, such as
zânë,
zënë,
zërë,
xanë,
xânë, etc. (and their definite forms:
zâna,
zëna,
zëra,
xana,
xâna, etc.).
Arbëreshë Zónja or
Zónja të Jáshtëme are also used, the latter is found also in standard Albanian as
Jashtësme, a euphemism of
Zana.
Etymology Since the unvoiced
Illyrian fricative
th is considered to be analogous with
z in Albanian, the Illyrian
Thana (the name of a nymph, fairy or deity, attested in votive inscriptions of the Roman era) is traditionally considered the precursor of the Albanian
Zana. The theonym is also regarded as a cognate and equivalent of the
Latin Diāna. In this case, along with
Romanian zână, Albanian
zana may be related to
Proto-Indo-European Dyeus ('bright, sky, deity'), all ultimately deriving from
*dyeu 'sky', similarly to the Albanian sky and lightning god
Zoj-z, and its possible epithet
Zot "Sky Father" from
Proto-Albanian *dźie̅u ̊ a(t)t-, ultimately from
PIE *Dyḗus ph₂tḗr. The
Arbëreshë variant of the name for nymph,
Zónja (also referred to as
Zónja të Jáshtëme), would also be a cognate. Similarly to
Zot "God", "Lord",
zot "lord", capitalized
Zonja or
Zôja is used in Albanian for "Goddess", "Lady" (cf.
Zonja e Dheut and
Zôja Prende or Zôja e Bukuris), while uncapitalized
zonja or
zôja is used for "lady" or "mistress". Ancient Greek
Dióne, parallel to Latin
Diāna, could be regarded as a feminine counterpart of the Sky-God. The variant ζόνε
Zonë appears in
Albanian oaths like περ τένε ζόνε,
për tënë Zonë, "By our God/Lord", and in Old Albanian texts for
Pater Noster (
Tënëzonë,
tënë-Zonë). It is equivalent to the Albanian
accusative Zótënë/Zótnë, obtained through the assimilation of
-tënë/-tnë into
-në. At the sanctuary of
Dodona the Greek Sky-God Zeus is paired with
Dione, and the geographical coincidence of the Albanian case is remarkable. Other less common etymologies have been proposed: from Albanian:
zë/-ri,
zâ/-ni, meaning 'voice' (pl.
zëra/zana meaning 'voices'), with the sense of '
muse', also interpreted as a goddess of singing; from Albanian:
zë(n),
xë(n),
zâ(n), meaning 'to take (hold of), seize, clutch, catch', as well as 'to learn'. ==Attributes==