Mikaiah

Meaning of Mikaiah

Mikaiah glides from the lips as mih-KAY-uh, its three syllables unfolding like moonlight upon a silent koi pond; at once a child of the ancient Hebrew Micah—“Who is like God?”—and, in a whisper of Japanese lilt, an echo of mika, that “beautiful fragrance” drifting among blossom-laden boughs. Unbound by gender, this name carries a poised coolness, a lantern of quiet assurance kindled at the crossroads of faith and nature. Though it drifts through American charts in modest currents—hovering around the nine-hundred-fiftieth rank—it bears the weight of timeless wonder, conjuring temple shadows and the soft rustle of bamboo in spring breezes. Mikaiah is an expansive canvas on which each soul may paint its own odyssey, a word of gentle power, fragrant as cherry blossoms yet deep as an ancestral prayer.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as mih-KAY-uh (/mɪˈkeɪ.ə/)

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Nora Watanabe
Curated byNora Watanabe

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