Annalie

Meaning of Annalie

Annalie traces its linguistic roots to two complementary sources: on the Continent it evolved as Annelie, a German and Scandinavian pet form of Anna (ultimately from the Hebrew ḥannah, “grace”), while in North America it was independently re-engineered as a streamlined blend of Anna and the surname-turned-given-name Lee. Either way, the result is a three-syllable variant whose cadence lands neatly between the antique Anna and the breezier Annalee, giving parents a compromise that feels neither sternly biblical nor excessively modern. U.S. vital-statistics data show the name hovering in the 800–900 range since the early 1990s—never a chart-topper, but also never entirely vanishing, which suggests a modest yet stable niche appeal. That steadiness, coupled with its meaning of “grace” and its unobtrusive phonetics, renders Annalie a quiet outlier: familiar enough to spell on the first try, rare enough to leave the monogram unshared at preschool.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as an-uh-LEE (/ˈænəli/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Annalie

Annalie Longo -
Laura Gibson
Curated byLaura Gibson

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