Talita, pronounced tuh-LEE-tuh (/təˈliːtə/), springs from the Aramaic tongue—a gentle invocation meaning “little girl”—yet unfurls with the grace of a cherry blossom drifting on a moonlit koi pond. In its delicate syllables one hears the echo of ancient lullabies and the soft murmur of bamboo leaves in a summer breeze, weaving a tapestry of warmth cool as moonlight. Though rare in modern America, its quiet persistence through decades—from humble beginnings in the late 1960s to its whisper‐soft appearances in recent birth registers—imbues it with an understated elegance. Like a silk kimono patterned with subtle cranes in flight, Talita carries both story and serenity, inviting each bearer to blossom at her own pace, her name a lyrical bridge between worlds old and new.
| Talita von Fürstenberg - | 
| Talita Bernardo - | 
| Talita Antunes - | 
| Talita Baqlah - |