Adin traces its roots to the Hebrew Bible, where it means “delicate” or “refined,” yet its modern journey spans continents: linguists note parallels to the Gaelic Aidan (“little fire”), and in Spanish-speaking communities the biblical “Adín” slips easily off the tongue, giving the name a quiet Pan-Latin resonance. In the United States, Social Security data show that Adin has hovered in the lower half of the Top 1,000 for more than a century—never a chart-topper, but reliably present, with 74 newborns recorded in 2024. Parents drawn to Adin often cite its crisp two-syllable sound—AY-din—its scriptural pedigree, and its adaptable spelling, qualities that let the name feel both time-tested and quietly contemporary.
| Adin Steinsaltz - |
| Adin Ross - |
| Adin Brown - |