Kasara

Meaning of Kasara

Kasara, pronounced kuh-SAH-ruh, is a feminine given name whose etymological threads weave an unexpectedly rich tapestry: many scholars trace its root to the Sanskrit kaśāra, “lake” or “still water,” while others detect a modern Creole of consonants—perhaps an imaginative fusion of the ever–classic Sarah with the playful prefix “Ka-,” a construction beloved by late-twentieth-century American namers. Either way, the name carries the quiet shimmer of a moonlit lagoon, suggesting composure, reflective depth, and a certain silver-toned mystery. In the United States it has drifted in and out of the Social-Security rolls like a migrating swallow—never cracking the top 700, yet leaving delicate footprints between 1975 and 2007, when its peak annual cohort of forty-four newborns (1988) proved that rarity can be statistically measurable. One might say, with dry accuracy, that Kasara has made a career of eluding mass production while maintaining impeccable cultural credentials: its liquid vowels please Spanish and Italian ears, its soft terminal “-a” charms the Romance-language palate, and its overall cadence feels equally at ease in a Sanskrit mantra or a Latin lullaby. For parents seeking a name that is both academically grounded and poetically uncharted—much like a hidden cenote in Yucatán—Kasara offers tranquil depth without the burden of ubiquity.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as kuh-SAH-ruh (/kəˈsɑːrə/)

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Similar Names to Kasara

Teresa Margarita Castillo
Curated byTeresa Margarita Castillo

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