Jazmine

💡 Meaning

Jasmine Flower

🌍 Origin

Persian

🚼 Gender

Unisex

The story behind Jazmine

Jazmine is a modern English spelling variant of Jasmine, which derives from the Persian word *yasmin*. The term originally referred to the jasmine flower, a fragrant flowering plant native to tropical regions of the Old World. The Persian word entered European languages through trade and cultural contact, with Arabic adopting it as *yasmin* and spreading it throughout the Mediterranean and beyond. The name passed into English during the medieval period as "jasmine," where it referred both to the plant and eventually became used as a given name. The spelling "Jazmine" represents a contemporary American respelling that became popular in the late twentieth century, reflecting the tendency in English-speaking cultures to create distinctive orthographic variants of traditional names.

Jazmine has no historical figure or mythological bearer associated with it, as the name emerged as a given name only in modern times. It is a modern coinage—specifically, a late-twentieth-century variant spelling of the earlier name Jasmine. The connection to the jasmine flower carries symbolic associations with grace, elegance, and natural beauty across many cultures. The popularity of Jazmine peaked in the 1990s as part of a broader trend in American naming practices favoring creative spellings and floral-inspired names for girls. This variant exemplifies how traditional plant-based names continue to evolve through contemporary orthographic innovation.

✨ Quick facts

Syllables
2
Length
Medium
Numerology
6
Pattern
C·V·C·C·V·C·V

📊 Popularity

US peak: #392 (1990s)

🔄 Related names

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