Jameisha is a feminine appellation that emerged in the United States as a linguistically innovative offshoot of established naming elements, exhibiting a phonological profile (/dʒəˈmiːʃə/) consonant with American English phonotactics. Morphologically, it appears to synthesize the Anglo patronymic element “James” with the Afro-Arabic given name “Aisha,” thereby generating a lexeme resonant with both Western and Islamic onomastic traditions. Analysis of national birth data indicates its first recorded instance in 1982 (seven registrations, rank 798), a subsequent ascent culminating in forty-two registrations in 1996 (rank 818), and thereafter a gradual decline into lower millennial percentiles by 2010 (five registrations, rank 949). Such demographic patterns reflect broader sociolinguistic tendencies toward creative name formation within diverse American communities, wherein Jameisha functions as a marker of cultural hybridity and individual distinction. Its technical composition and balanced syllabic cadence underscore its analytical precision, rendering it a distinctive option for parents seeking a systematically structured name with cross-cultural resonance.