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Ivy-Ann as a Baby Name. Meaning and Origin of Ivy-Ann

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The baby name Ivy-Ann is a Female name , 3 syllables long and is pronounced EYE-vee-AN (IPA: /ˈaɪviˌæn/).

Ivy-Ann is English, Greek in Origin.

Gender: Female
Syllables: 3.0
Origin: English, Greek
Pronunciation: EYE-vee-AN (IPA: /ˈaɪviˌæn/)

What is the meaning of the name Ivy-Ann ?

The baby name Ivy-Ann is a Female name , 3 syllables long and is pronounced EYE-vee-AN (IPA: /ˈaɪviˌæn/).

Ivy-Ann is English, Greek in Origin.

Ivy-Ann blends the English botanical name Ivy with the timeless Ann. Ivy traces to Old English ifig and entered given-name use during the Victorian love of floral names; the plant symbolized fidelity, endurance, and eternal life in Christian art, and was sacred to Dionysus in classical lore. Ann comes from Hebrew Channah, "grace" or "favor," filtered through Greek and Latin as Anna and through French as Anne, long honored in Christendom via Saint Anne.

As a hyphenated double name, Ivy-Ann follows a British and Commonwealth convention that lends a poised, vintage-modern feel. The combination’s sense reads as "grace entwined with fidelity" or "steadfast grace." Usage of Ivy has surged again in the 21st century, giving Ivy-Ann a familiar yet distinctive profile. Variants include Ivy-Anne, Ivy Ann, Ivey-Ann, Ivie-Ann, and Ivy-Anna.

Ivy-Ann is vanishingly rare. In all, it appears just 1 time, across 1 country.

Ivy-Ann has the following similar or variant Names

Ivy-Ann – Popularity by country

Based on birth registration data from national statistics agencies.

Country Gender Year Rank Born of
ZA 0 #474 1 14,421
ZA

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People also ask about Ivy-Ann

Ivy-Ann is predominantly a girl's name.
Ivy-Ann is a 3 syllable name, pronounced EYE-vee-AN (IPA: /ˈaɪviˌæn/).
Common nicknames and spelling variations include Ivy Ann, Ivyann, Ivy-Anne, Ivyanne and Ivey-Ann.
Ivy-Ann is a name of Greek origin, traditionally used in Greece. It doesn't appear in the major international birth registries we track, but it is an established name within Greece and its diaspora communities.
It is, yes. Ivy-Ann is missing from every national name ranking we cover, which is what makes it such an unusual choice.