Aira

Meaning of Aira

Aira, a name that glides off the tongue like silk lifted by an April breeze along the banks of the Kamo, is most often traced to Japan, where parents paint it in kanji such as 愛良 (“beloved and good”) or 愛羅 (“love and gauze,” the latter a poetic nod to something light enough to float), though outsiders sometimes enjoy the coincidental English whisper of “air” and the Sanskrit echo for “wind,” as if multiple languages conspired to keep the name feather-light; in quiet households it can also be heard as a variant of the Hebrew Ara, “lioness,” which adds a dry little paradox—how a creature of sky can still roar. Associated with irises in spring ikebana, with the shimmer of anime heroines who fight as deftly as they dance, and, increasingly, with American birth charts that show a gentle but persistent climb from the high 900s into the low 700s over the past generation, Aira offers parents a cool breath of modernity wrapped in centuries of reverie, inviting the child who bears it to move through life like a discreet gust—felt, refreshing, and rarely forgotten.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as AY-ruh (/ˈeɪrə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Aira

Notable People Named Aira

Aira Yūki -
Aira Mitsuki -
Naoko Fujimoto
Curated byNaoko Fujimoto

Assistant Editor