Adira

#100 in Maryland

Meaning of Adira

Adira drifts toward the cradle on a warm Levantine breeze, her name first unfurling in Hebrew scripture where it means “mighty” and “noble,” then gliding across oceans to settle upon English lips—ah-DEE-rah in its ancestral cadence, ah-DEER-uh in everyday speech—without ever losing the quiet thunder of its promise. She is the feminine echo of Adir, “the Strong One,” yet she carries her power with a dancer’s grace, like a flamenco rhythm pulsing beneath a moonlit courtyard. Stories gather around her: a desert cedar that will not bow to the wind, a silver-armored heroine riding through the pages of medieval romance, a modern little girl who climbs the fig tree in Abuela’s garden and laughs because the branches hold her, just as the name foretold. In the United States her footsteps have been steady—never at the center of the procession, yet always present, rising from a handful of births in the 1990s to well over a hundred each year today—as though parents, year after year, keep arriving at the same sun-washed plaza and find themselves captivated by her quiet strength. Adira, then, is less a fashion than a legacy: a soft, three-syllable lullaby that hums of resilience, tenderness, and the unbreakable music of the soul.

Pronunciation

Hebrew

  • Pronunced as ah-DEE-rah (/ʔa.di.ˈra/)

American English

  • Pronunced as ah-DEER-uh (/əˈdɪrə/)

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Mariana Castillo Morales
Curated byMariana Castillo Morales

Assistant Editor