Guiliana

Meaning of Guiliana

Guiliana sails in on a breeze of sunlit cobblestones, a melody that echoes the ancient Latin Juliana but with a sultry Italian twist. Born from the same root that once graced Roman patricians, this name pirouettes off the tongue as gwee-LYAH-nah, like a song drifting through a Florence piazza at dusk. In the United States, it remains a rare gem—hovering in the nine-hundreds on national baby charts since the early ’90s—yet its quiet ascent from five babies in 1993 to seven in 2024 feels less like a gentle ripple and more like a swell of Tuscan hills at sunrise. With its spirited yet grounded charm, Guiliana evokes both the laughter of family gatherings under grapevine canopies and the timeless grace of marble statues, promising a little girl who’ll grow as joyfully bright and beautifully steadfast as an Italian summer.

Pronunciation

Italian

  • Pronunced as gwee-LYAH-nah (/gwiljaˈna/)

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Maria Fernandez
Curated byMaria Fernandez

Assistant Editor