Zamara

#43 in New Mexico

Meaning of Zamara

Zamara is a cross-border charmer that first turns up in Spanish and Italian records—pronounced za-MAH-ra in both tongues—yet it refuses to stay put. Some linguists tie it to the Hebrew verb zamar, “to sing,” others hear echoes of the Arabic-leaning Samara, “evening conversation,” and a few nod toward the Castilian place-name Zamora. Whatever the pedigree, the associations tilt consistently toward music and twilight. In the United States, Zamara has hovered in the high 800s to low 900s since the mid-1990s, most recently ranking 878 with 72 newborns in 2024. That keeps it comfortably above obscurity but safely below playground saturation—a name likely to attract a second look without provoking administrative sighs. Stylistically, it splits the difference between crisp Zara and retro Tamara, offering parents a multicultural, three-syllable option with a disarming finish. Subtle novelty, yes; eccentric spectacle, no.

Pronunciation

Italian

  • Pronunced as za-MAH-ra (/zaˈmaːra/)

Spanish

  • Pronunced as zah-MAH-rah (/θaˈmaɾa/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Laura Katherine Bennett
Curated byLaura Katherine Bennett

Assistant Editor