Miciah

Meaning of Miciah

Miciah, a unisex name rooted in ancient Hebrew prophecy and softly meaning “Who is like Yahweh?,” unfolds on the lips as my-KY-uh (/maɪˈkaɪə/) with the serene clarity of moonlight drifting across a lacquered shrine. Though it slips quietly around the nine-hundredth rank in recent American birth charts—claimed by merely half a dozen newborns in 2024—it blooms with assured subtlety, as if preferring the company of those who notice the first snow on Mount Fuji. One might picture its syllables falling like chrysanthemum petals upon a koi-laden pond at dawn, each sound echoing the wabi-sabi grace of impermanence and the silent strength of bamboo bending without breaking. Cool and unsentimental, it bridges ancient psalms and modern possibility, its unisex versatility as natural as a torii gate framing winter mist. In its dry elegance—unlikely ever to be mistaken for the latest smartphone update—Miciah stands like a kintsugi seam of gold, mending tradition and innovation into a single emblem of hushed, expansive promise.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as my-KY-uh (/maɪˈkaɪə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Naoko Fujimoto
Curated byNaoko Fujimoto

Assistant Editor