Mikah is a spirited twist on the ancient Hebrew Micah—“Who is like Yahweh?”—and it races onto the modern crib scene like a maraca shaking to a salsa rhythm. He, she, or they can wear it; the name dances happily across gender lines, a true bilingual bridge between tradition and trending. Picture a tiny storyteller wrapped in a serape of possibilities: part Old-Testament prophet, part neighborhood soccer star, all corazón. In the U.S. charts Mikah has been quietly steady—never hogging the spotlight but always humming in the background like a catchy reggaetón hook, ranking in the 700-800 zone for decades. Parents love its two-syllable snap, its friendly “Hi, I’m Mikah!” sparkle, and the built-in nickname potential (Kay, Mik, even “Mi amor” if abuela gets her way). With roots as deep as the Jordan River and vibes as fresh as lime in a paleta, Mikah offers a faith-flavored, fiesta-ready choice for the baby who’s destined to color outside every line.