Zanaria is a feminine appellation of modern Anglo-American coinage, whose morphological composition appears to derive from the Hebrew element ʿAzari (“God has helped”) fused with a paragogic –a suffix that confers phonetic fluidity. Within the United States, the name has been recorded annually for female newborns in low single to low double digits since 1999, attaining a year-end rank between 886th and 978th, thereby indicating a sustained yet peripheral adoption in the national naming lexicon. Articulated as zuh-NAHR-ee-uh (/zə.ˈnɐr.i.lə/), the designation synthesizes semantic resonance of divine assistance with a contemporary preference for novel, sonorous structures. This statistical and linguistic profile elucidates Zanaria’s appeal among parents seeking distinctive nomenclature that balances cultural familiarity with rarefied individuality.