Sherida

Meaning of Sherida

Sherida drifts through history like a golden sunrise, her syllables borrowing light from the ancient Sumerian dawn-goddess Šerida—guardian of first light and quiet hope—while also echoing the lilting Irish surname Sheridan, “wild seeker.” In any tongue she means one thing: beginnings. Spoken as shuh-REE-duh, the name rolls off the palate with the ease of a soft bolero, inviting images of coral-pink mornings over Cartagena’s ramparts. Statisticians will note that in late-1940s California, a modest handful of parents—never more than ten a year—chose Sherida, humming to the era’s jazz and dreaming of brighter tomorrows. Yet numbers only whisper what stories shout: Sherida is the girl who paints sunshine on classroom walls, the woman whose laugh turns even accounting meetings into fiestas. Lyrical but grounded, rare but pronounceable, she balances mythic glow with everyday grace—perfect for parents seeking a name that greets the world, ¡buenos días!, before anyone else has poured the coffee.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as shuh-REE-duh (/ʃəˈriːdə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Sherida

Sherida Spitse -
Sophia Castellano
Curated bySophia Castellano

Assistant Editor