Tajanee, pronounced tuh-JAH-nee (/təˈdʒɑːni/), is a feminine given name of relatively recent provenance in American onomastic registers, whose etymological construction suggests a synthesis of the Persian-Arabic element taj, signifying “crown,” with the English diminutive suffix -anee, akin to those found in names such as Janie. While concrete historical attestations are scant, onomastic analysis supports the hypothesis of a creative coinage originating in the late twentieth century, corresponding to a period marked by increased experimentation in name formation and cross-cultural borrowing. United States Social Security Administration records indicate that Tajanee appeared sporadically among newborn girls between 1995 and 2004, attaining a maximum frequency of five recorded instances in both 2002 and 2004 and reaching its highest national rank of 853 in 1995, a distribution that underscores its status as a distinctive yet infrequently chosen appellation. Within the Anglo-American naming milieu, Tajanee exemplifies a paradigm in which semantic gravitas—conferred by the concept of the crown—is juxtaposed with a phonetic structure readily assimilable to English-speaking contexts, thereby offering a balance between novelty and familiarity. Accordingly, the name occupies a specialized niche in contemporary onomastics, emblematic of modern trends that privilege innovative etymological fusion and selective cultural allusion.