Selma
来自Big Physics
wiktionary
Taken to use in the 19th century when similar-sounding names, Elma, Thelma, Alma, Wilma, etc. were in vogue. Perhaps a shortening of Anselma, or from the name of a place in the James Macpherson's Ossian cycle of epic poems, itself from Scottish Gaelic sealladh + math(“good vision”). In some cases perhaps borrowed from Turkish Selma, from Arabic سَلْمَى (salmā).