Abrielle

Meaning of Abrielle

Abrielle is generally understood as a modern French elaboration on the Hebrew‐derived Gabrielle—ultimately from גַּבְרִיאֵל (Gavri’el, “God is my strength”)—with the initial syllable lightened and the internal consonant cluster simplified to yield a name whose phonetic contour (ah-bree-EL) emphasizes fluidity rather than the weightier cadence of its source form. In the United States, Social Security data describe a trajectory that has remained quietly peripheral yet consistently present: first recorded in the early 1980s, Abrielle advanced from single-digit annual usages to a modest peak of 276 births in 2014, after which its incidence tapered to 69 infants by 2024, placing it in the high-800s among female names. This statistical profile, while unremarkable in absolute terms, lends the name an appealing balance between recognizability and rarity, a quality often prized by parents seeking distinction without obscurity. Culturally, Abrielle retains a faint Gallic resonance—reinforced by its French pronunciation /a.bʁi.ɛl/—yet adapts comfortably to Anglo-American phonology, and its underlying meaning of divine fortitude confers a restrained but enduring gravitas.

Pronunciation

French

  • Pronunced as ah-bree-EL (/a.bʁi.ɛl/)

American English

  • Pronunced as ah-bree-EL (/əˈbriːl/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Vivian Whitaker
Curated byVivian Whitaker

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