Mairany’s precise etymological emergence remains somewhat elusive, though it is broadly interpreted as a contemporary elaboration of the venerable Mary—herself derived from Latin Maria and Hebrew Miriam—imbuing the name with an inherited duality of antiquity and innovation. In the United States, its adoption has been modest yet consistent since its first documented appearances in the mid-1990s Social Security Administration data, wherein it has oscillated between ranks 844 and 981 and most recently registered seven occurrences in 2024; phonetically rendered /meɪˈræni/, Mairany exemplifies Anglo-American naming tendencies that privilege novel morphological constructions while sustaining an implicit connection to established Mariological heritage.