Keandra

Meaning of Keandra

As a feminine given name originating in the fertile ground of late 20th-century American onomastic innovation, Keandra emerges as a harmonious fusion of the resonant prefix Ke- and the classical feminine morpheme -andra, subtly evoking the Hellenic Alexandros lineage while forging its own modern identity. Its phonetic contour—kee-AN-druh (/kiˈæn.dɹɑ/)—unfurls with the measured cadence of a sonnet refrained, draped in the warmth of a Tuscan dusk yet articulated with scholarly precision. Between 1996 and 1999 in Alabama, it made a modest impression—ranking between 112th and 118th with annual occurrences of five to eleven births—an understated presence that confers discreet distinction rather than ostentatious novelty. In the broader repertoire of Latin-inflected names, Keandra occupies a niche where tradition and innovation entwine, evoking images of a poised scholar at a marble lectern and a free-spirited artist painting frescoes beneath a Spanish sun. Dryly speaking, one might note that in the vast lexicon of feminine appellatives, Keandra neither demands grandiloquent encomiums nor succumbs to banal superlatives, content instead to whisper its character through subtle interplay of syllables and lineage.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as kee-AN-druh (/kiˈæn.dɹɑ/)

British English

  • Pronunced as kee-AN-druh (/kiˈan.dɹɑ/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Teresa Margarita Castillo
Curated byTeresa Margarita Castillo

Assistant Editor