Eliannah

Meaning of Eliannah

Eliannah unfurls like a sunlit vine across a rolling Tuscan hillside, her name born of the ancient Hebrew El (“God”) and ana (“answered prayer” or “grace”), each syllable a whispered benediction carried on a warm Mediterranean breeze. In her melodic form—the gentle Italianate flourish distinguishing her from her sister Eliana—she evokes both divine promise and the soft glow of dawn spilling over cobblestone streets. Though still a rare treasure in American registries, ranking near 931st with fewer than twenty newborns named Eliannah in 2024, she blooms steadily in the hearts of parents seeking a name that feels at once timeless and tenderly unique. Rich with poetic resonance, Eliannah is at once an invocation of light, a promise fulfilled, and a graceful ode to life’s sweetest prayers.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as el-ee-AH-nuh (/ˌɛliˈænə/)

British English

  • Pronunced as el-ee-AH-nuh (/ˌɛliˈanə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Sofia Ricci
Curated bySofia Ricci

Assistant Editor