Dewana

Meaning of Dewana

Dewana, an appellation typically assigned to female individuals, is predominantly encountered in English-speaking contexts and is phonetically rendered as /dəˈwɑːnə/. While its etymology remains contested, one prevailing hypothesis situates the name within the Persian lexicon—drawing on دیوانه (dīvāneh), which conveys impassioned ardor or ecstatic fervor—whereas another theory posits an indirect Sanskritic influence via deva, denoting “divine,” thereby suggesting a dual lineage that marries celestial connotations with humanistic intensity. Empirical data from the United States Social Security Administration trace Dewana’s sporadic introduction in the mid-1930s (six births in 1936, rank 568), followed by intermittent usage and a modest apex in 1980 (23 occurrences, rank 764), before a gradual diminution by the early 1990s. This pattern underscores the name’s rare yet enduring presence within the onomastic landscape, indicating its selection by parents in search of a moniker that is at once uncommon and semantically rich. In sum, Dewana occupies a distinct niche in contemporary Anglo-American naming practice, its layered potential origins and measured popularity converging to offer a choice both nuanced and evocative.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as duh-WAH-nuh (/dəˈwɑːnə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Julia Bancroft
Curated byJulia Bancroft

Assistant Editor