Zamari—pronounced zuh-MAR-ee in English and thah-mah-RHEE in Spanish—is a modern unisex appellation whose most persuasive etymological reading links the Hebrew verb zamar, “to sing or make music,” with the Swahili–Arabic element -amari, “strength” or “eternal,” thereby intertwining ideas of lyrical expression and steadfastness; some onomasts, however, regard it as a phonetic elaboration of the Hebrew Zamir or the African-American Jamari. Usage data corroborate its niche yet persistent appeal in the United States: since first surfacing in the Social Security Administration’s Top 1000 in 1999, annual occurrences have ranged from single digits to just over 130, consistently anchoring the name in the low-800s and signaling steady interest without mainstream proliferation. These statistical contours, coupled with its cross-linguistic adaptability, Z-initial distinctiveness, and gender neutrality, situate Zamari squarely within contemporary Anglo-American naming trends that favor mellifluous originality over saturation, offering prospective parents a choice that conveys artistry tempered by quiet resilience.