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SPOILERS
Geralt actually "won" Ciri when he rescued her father (named Urcheon) from an untimely death at the hands of a queen (cannot remember her name right now). Urcheon had been cursed to have the appearance of a beast, but the queen's daughter fell in love with him, and they were betrothed to be wed. The queen hired Geralt to see Urcheon off, but he did quite the opposite, helping to break Urcheon's curse, and bringing the Queen's daughter and Urcheon together.
When Urcheon asked Geralt how he could ever repay this kindness, Geralt replied, "You shall give me that which you do not know you have."
This invoked the Law of Surprise; Ciri was that surprise (being the daughter of Urcheon and the Queen's daughter).
Geralt didn't take Ciri in right away; he actually recovered her after Nilfgaard attempted an invasion several years before the events of the first Witcher game (obviously, that invasion was repulsed, and is the touchstone for many conversations and events in the game--particularly where the sorceresses are concerned). Once Geralt linked up with Ciri, who was perhaps eight or so at the time, he took her to Kaer Morhen.
She is -NOT- a Witcher, because she hasn't undergone the Trial of the Grasses. She has, however, had all of their physical and combat training--she's just not a mutant.
In the novels--well, let's just say she's a lot more important to the story than Geralt himself is. You'll learn that for yourself later.
The bottom line is that the relationship is very much an adoptive father/daughter one, that was extended to Yennefer (in the novels) as an adoptive mother/daughter relationship later on.
Edit: The Queen's name was Calanthe; I cannot, for the life of me, remember her daughter's name though (and the daughter was Ciri's mother).
This one is the right answer.
So why is her hair white if she wasn't transformed?
Is that because Geralt is her bio father and she inherited the white hair from him? Hmmm, does the carpet match the drapes?
That's her natural hair color. She's often described in the novels as being a "flaxen-haired maiden," or, later, as "a flaxen-haired demon."
Hair color is phenotypic, and the Witcher novels get pretty heavily into genetics and phenotypic expression. If you'll notice, Geralt is the only white-haired Witcher in the games; Vesemir and the rest all have natural hair colors. Geralt's hair is part of a rare reaction to the Trial of the Grasses--thus why he's referred to by the Aen'Seidhe as Gwynn'bleide (White Wolf), and no other Witcher is.
As far as the novels (which precede the first game by many years in Poland) are concerned, Ciri's hair color is natural; Geralt's is the result of mutation, and no other Witcher shares that mutation.
He is not her biological father; there is -no- biological connection between the characters. She sometimes refers to him as her father in the novels, because he features prominently in her earliest--healthy--memories, but he did not sire her.
Her hair was originally ash colored. CDPR just made it more silver-y so they can establish the father-adopted daughter symbolism.
The name you are looking for is Pavetta.
:)
But it is funny how matter of factly some people said the absolute most wrong things ever.