Samon

Meaning of Samon

In contemporary Anglo-American usage, Samon functions as a feminine given name whose etymological roots can be traced to the Hebrew personal name Shlomo (via the Latin Salomon), meaning “peaceful,” while simultaneously resonating with the Old English noun salmun, or salmon, a fish traditionally emblematic of perseverance and wisdom. Although Social Security Administration data from 1986 through 1995 record only five to eleven annual occurrences—yielding rankings consistently between 803 and 858—its scarcity underscores rather than diminishes its appeal among parents seeking distinctive yet historically grounded appellations. The name’s phonological structure, characterized by a trochaic stress pattern and a consonant-vowel-consonant-vowel sequence, is uniformly rendered as /seɪˈmən/ in English, thereby promoting clarity and consistency across speech communities. From an onomastic perspective, Samon exemplifies the adaptive process by which ancient theophoric elements converge with vernacular lexemes to produce a neoclassical personal name. Its semantic duality—peace on one axis, natural tenacity on the other—imbues it with a layered complexity that rewards analytical scrutiny. While its absolute frequency remains minimal, the trend data suggest a modest but stable presence in late twentieth-century American birth registers. In synthesizing royal, biblical connotations with naturalistic imagery, Samon establishes itself as a name of measured sobriety and latent depth, appealing to those who prioritize semantic richness and phonetic precision.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as SAY-muhn (/seɪˈmən/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Samon

    Notable People Named Samon

    Samon Reider Rodríguez -
    Vivian Whitaker
    Curated byVivian Whitaker

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