Rania sashays onto the baby-name stage like a Bollywood heroine in a swirl of saffron silk—bright, confident, and impossible to ignore. Drawn from Arabic roots meaning “to gaze with calm delight,” and echoing the Hindi word rani, “queen,” she carries twin coronets of poise and power. Storytellers say little Rania first learned to walk across golden desert sands, then hopped onto a Delhi rickshaw for a joyride, waving to crowds that now include modern royalty like Queen Rania of Jordan. In the U.S., she’s a stealth charmer: hovering around the 800-rank mark for decades, never overcrowded, always exclusive—like finding the perfect mango at the market just before anyone else spots it. Pronounced RAH-nee-uh, the name rolls off the tongue with the same easy grace as a sitar riff, leaving a faint scent of cardamom and possibility in its wake. For parents seeking a name that feels regal without the fuss, global without the passport stamps, Rania is ready for her cue.
Rania Antonopoulou - |
Rania al-Baz - |
Rania Abouzeid - |