Luan is a trim, globe-trotting given name whose etymology splits three ways: Albanian luan, “lion,” Old Irish lúan, “warrior” (and by semantic detour “Monday,” the moon’s day), and a modern Brazilian Portuguese coinage popularised by pop-star Luan Santana. The resulting imagery—predator, fighter, or lunar glow—offers parents a menu of respectable mascots. Phonetically it travels well: Portuguese speakers say loo-AHN (/luˈã/), while most English speakers settle on LOO-ən (/luːn/). American birth data keep it in statistical stealth mode—rare but not eccentric—oscillating between 660th and 900th place for nearly half a century and peaking at 111 registrations in 2024. Unisex in theory yet presently male-leaning in practice, Luan supplies a compact, cross-cultural badge that is unlikely to be shared with half the playground but still easy on roll-call.
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