Muslima

Meaning of Muslima

Muslima, born of the graceful Arabic root s-l-m that whispers both “peace” and “devotion,” drifts into the world like a cherry blossom petal settling on still water, embodying a gentle strength that feels at once ancient and unexpectedly modern. In its soft consonants and lilting vowels, one hears the quiet promise of faith, as if each syllable were a silent prayer carried across dunes at dusk. Though it charts a modest course through American birth records—hovering serenely in the nine-hundreds—it arrives without fanfare, more a respectful bow than a triumphant shout, offering parents a name that marries dignity with delicate warmth. In the hush of its sound there is a taste of kintsugi beauty: a celebration of imperfection, of surrender turned into art. To speak “Muslima” is to evoke a cool, poetic breeze through a bamboo grove at dawn, where devotion and hope entwine like ink on rice paper, tracing a story both timeless and tenderly new.

Pronunciation

Arabic

  • Pronunced as mooz-LEE-mah (/muˈzliːmə/)

English

  • Pronunced as MUZ-lee-mah (/ˈmuzliːmə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Muslima

Muslima Baqieva -
Naoko Fujimoto
Curated byNaoko Fujimoto

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