Meisha

Meaning of Meisha

Meisha, pronounced MEE-shuh (/miːˈʃə/), unfolds on the tongue like a midnight lotus, its origin rooted in the Arabic Aisha—“she who lives”—and echoing the Swahili maisha for “life,” while faint Japanese brushstrokes of mei (芽) for “bud” and sha (紗) for “silk” lend it an undercurrent of dawn-lit elegance. It moves with the composure of a lone crane across a still ukiyo-e pond, its syllables hushed yet vibrant, conjuring associations of quiet resilience, gentle prosperity and the threshold of possibility that flickers like candlelight behind a rice-paper screen. In a landscape of names that often blaze and fade, Meisha offers a tempered refrain, a dry humor in its simplicity that suggests a tea master’s wry smile, and an expansive promise for a child destined to write her own poem in the margins of the world.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as MEE-shuh (/miːˈʃə/)

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Notable People Named Meisha

Meisha Ross Porter -
Naoko Fujimoto
Curated byNaoko Fujimoto

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