Zeina springs from the Arabic word “zayn,” meaning “beauty” or “ornament,” and its melodic cadence—pronounced ZAY-nah—has long rippled across Levantine markets and Persian poetry alike. Much like a filigreed tile in an Isfahani courtyard, the name balances elegance with quiet strength, finding written cousins in the Hebrew “Zena” and the Persian “Zeynab.” Census figures show that, in the United States, Zeina has hovered in the high-800s to low-900s for nearly five decades, a statistical whisper that suggests selectivity rather than obscurity. Parents often choose it for the subtle promise that a child might grow up to decorate the world rather than merely occupy it—an expectation both charming and, admittedly, a touch ambitious. Linguists appreciate its economical two syllables, while travelers hear in it the rustle of silk road bazaars. In short, Zeina is a compact gem: culturally layered, numerically modest, and quietly luminous.
| Zeina Ibrahim - |
| Zeina Abirached - |
| Zeina Daccache - |