Cera

Meaning of Cera

Spoken SEER-uh, Cera brims with playful mythic crossroads, where the Latin name of the Roman harvest goddess Ceres tiptoes into an Irish twilight echo of Ciara’s “dark-haired” charm. Each syllable feels like amber fields swaying under a carefree sky, as if the earth itself hummed a lullaby of abundance and renewal. Though Cera has never stormed the top 100, it’s been quietly sowing its seeds across American birth registers since the late 1970s—hovering in the 900s with occasional surges (remember the 98 little Cerās in 1995?)—and now settles into a boutique rarity with single-digit counts. It’s a name that’s both down-to-earth and mischievously modern, a gentle nod to ancient plenty wrapped in a bright, adventurous spirit.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as SEER-uh (/ˈsɪrə/)

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Mikayla Savoy
Curated byMikayla Savoy

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