Adrin

Meaning of Adrin

Adrin, pronounced uh-DRIN (/əˈdrɪn/), traces its lineage to the Latin Hadrianus, itself a toponymic epithet meaning “from Hadria,” a town on the Adriatic coast whose sun-drenched ports and enduring maritime legacies resonate in the name’s very core. Although its usage in the United States has remained modest—only five newborns bore the name in 2024, earning it a rank of 919—it sustains a remarkably steady undercurrent of favor across more than a century, with annual occurrences fluctuating within single digits yet never disappearing entirely. Morphologically concise and phonologically distinguished by its stressed medial syllable, Adrin evokes a nuanced fusion of resilience and grace, offering modern parents a way to honor classical tradition without resorting to more common variants. From an academic perspective, its crisp consonantal framework and low-frequency vowel pairing strike a balance between historical weight and contemporary distinctiveness, positioning Adrin as both a tribute to antiquity and a marker of singular identity.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as uh-DRIN (/əˈdrɪn/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Adrin

Notable People Named Adrin

Adrin Nazarian -
Elena Sandoval
Curated byElena Sandoval

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