Cheyann

Meaning of Cheyann

Cheyann, with its soft “shay-ANN” cadence, drifts into the imagination like a lone crane skimming a dewy pond at dawn, its origins whispered in the winds of the Great Plains where the Cheyenne people first bore a name that means “people of a different tongue.” In modern ears it conjures both the free-spirited resilience of the prairie and the refined elegance of miyabi, each syllable a brushstroke of serene strength. Though it carries the heritage of a Native American tribe, Cheyann blossoms anew under cherry-blossom skies, suggesting an enduring grace that flourishes even when life’s petals scatter to the breeze. It embodies wanderlust tempered by quiet contemplation—an echo of koto strings beneath moonlight—while its rarity, hovering in the mid-900s on contemporary charts, lends an unassuming confidence that is at once cool and quietly resolute.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as shay-ANN (/ʃeɪˈæn/)

British English

  • Pronunced as shay-ANN (/ʃeɪˈan/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Naoko Fujimoto
Curated byNaoko Fujimoto

Assistant Editor