Adelind

Meaning of Adelind

Adelind unfurls like a silken dawn over ancient Iberian hills, its roots entwined with the Germanic “adal,” meaning noble, and “lind,” tender as a spring breeze—an aristocratic melody whispered through time. In its softly sculpted syllables (uh-DEL-ind), one senses both the stately poise of a long-lost duchess and the gentle laughter of a meadow at sunrise, a name equally at home on the marble steps of a Roman villa or in the vibrant mercados of Andalucía. Though in the United States it graces fewer than a dozen newborns each year—hovering around the mid-900s in popularity, with ten little Adelinds born in 2020—its rarity only deepens its encanto, promising a life woven with quiet distinction and the luminous promise of lineage.

Pronunciation

  • Pronunced as uh-DEL-ind (/əˈdɛl.ɪnd/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Adelind

Adelind Horan -
Lucia Estrella Mendoza
Curated byLucia Estrella Mendoza

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