Rozana

Meaning of Rozana

Rozana is a rose with a passport: most linguists trace her petals back to the Latin “rosa,” yet she also flirts with Slavic folklore and even Persian poetry, where similar sounds evoke the first blush of dawn. Said aloud—roh-ZAH-nuh—she twirls off the tongue like a slow salsa step, warm, bright, and a little bit daring. History shows her blooming in occasional spurts on U.S. name charts (a handful of babies in the 1950s, a cameo in the disco-era ’70s, another peek in the 2020s), suggesting she prefers to surprise rather than crowd the garden. Rozana carries built-in imagery: a sunrise-colored rose, a courtyard serenade, a promise that something lovely is about to unfold. Parents who choose her often want a name as familiar as a bouquet yet as uncommon as the hummingbird that hovers over it. Saints’ lists may pass her by and movie marquees haven’t lit her up—pero no importa. Rozana is the quiet blossom at the vineyard’s edge, waiting for just the right family to breathe in her unexpected perfume.

Pronunciation

British English

  • Pronunced as roh-ZAH-nuh (/rəʊˈzɑːnə/)

American English

  • Pronunced as roh-ZAH-nuh (/roʊˈzɑːnə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Rozana

Rozana Montiel -
Rozana Radi -
Carmen Teresa Lopez
Curated byCarmen Teresa Lopez

Assistant Editor