Jesica

Meaning of Jesica

Jesica, a streamlined whisper of the age-old Jessica, traces its lineage to the Hebrew Yiskah—“she who beholds”—and emerges like a single cherry blossom drifting across a moonlit pond, its consonants and vowels flowing in soft cadence (JEH-si-kah) as if echoing a distant koto refrain. Though less common than its Shakespearean predecessor, this variant has graced Texas nurseries from the late 1970s through the turn of the millennium, climbing modestly in the ranks of cherished names before settling into a serene undercurrent of quiet elegance, its popularity a subtle poem in the tapestry of time. In the interplay of light and shadow, Jesica evokes the stillness of ink-washed pines on washi paper, suggesting a soul attuned to hidden depths and poetic foresight, a name that carries both ancient warmth and the cool clarity of dawn mist over Kyoto’s silent gardens.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as JEH-si-kah (/ˈdʒɛsɪkə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

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Notable People Named Jesica

Jesica Fitriana -
Jesica Santillan -
Nora Watanabe
Curated byNora Watanabe

Assistant Editor