Jerami

Meaning

God Is Exalted

Unisex
English

The story behind Jerami

Jerami is a modern spelling variant of the traditional name Jeremy, which derives from the Hebrew Yirmeyahu (יִרְמְיָהוּ), composed of the elements "yirum" (exalt) and "yah" (the Lord). The name entered English through biblical and ecclesiastical tradition, ultimately arriving through Old French and Latin intermediaries. Jeremy was well established in English-speaking countries by the medieval period, but Jerami represents a distinctly contemporary respelling that emerged in the late twentieth century, part of a broader trend of creative orthographic variations applied to established names.

Jerami has no historical bearer or cultural figure behind it; it is purely a modern invention, gaining modest popularity in the United States during the 1970s and beyond. This variant reflects late-twentieth-century naming practices in which parents increasingly experimented with phonetic spellings and alternative letter substitutions to create more individualized name forms. Unlike Jeremy, which carries centuries of literary and biblical reference (most notably the Old Testament prophet Jeremiah), Jerami exists solely as a contemporary stylistic choice without independent historical, mythological, or cultural resonance. Its emergence coincides with a period of expanding creative naming practices in American popular culture.

✨ Quick facts

Syllables
3
Length
Medium
Numerology
2
Pattern
C·V·C·V·C·V

📊 Popularity

US peak: #5642 (1970s)

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