Christi is a feminine given name formed as a hypocoristic variant of the Latin-derived Christina and Christian, ultimately tracing back to the Greek christós, “anointed,” and carrying with it the theological resonance of the Christian tradition. In English—pronounced KRISS-tee (/ˈkrɪsti/)—it functions as both an autonomous forename and as a truncated form of longer Christ- names, its morphology exemplifying the Anglo-American practice of generating diminutives through the –i suffix. An examination of Oklahoma birth records from 1948 through 1986 reveals Christi’s evolution from rare usage—five occurrences in 1948 (rank 116) and similarly low frequencies through the early 1950s—to a crescendo of popularity in the mid-1970s, when annual totals approached the forties and the name achieved its highest state ranking at 62 in 1973 and 1975. Thereafter, a gradual tapering in occurrences and ranking indicates a classic diffusion curve: initial emergence, ascendancy to peak visibility, and subsequent decline in new registrations. Its technical profile, combining etymological weight, linguistic adaptability, and documented demographic trends, renders Christi a name of particular interest to those seeking both historical context and measurable popularity metrics in the Anglo-American naming milieu.
Christi Belcourt - |
Christi Paul - |
Christi Brereton - |