Annaly combines Anna, from Hebrew Hannah meaning 'grace,' with a modern English-style ending.
Annaly is a lyrical elaboration rooted in the ancient Hebrew name Hannah, meaning "grace" or "favor from God." Through Latin and Old French, Hannah became Anna — one of the most enduring feminine names in Western history — and the added suffix transforms it into something more melodic and distinctive. The -ly ending carries echoes of Irish and Scandinavian naming traditions, where suffixes breathe new life into classic roots.
The name's components carry tremendous historical weight. Anna was borne by a prophetess in the Gospel of Luke, by Anna of Cleves (fourth wife of Henry VIII), and by Tolstoy's immortal Anna Karenina. The doubled vowel opening — Ann into Ana — gives the name a flowing quality that has attracted parents seeking the warmth of Anna without its familiarity.
Annaly sits in a broader modern trend of personalizing classical names through suffix play, alongside Annalee, Annalise, and Annalynn. It feels at once timeless and freshly minted, grounded in centuries of grace-meaning tradition while carrying a contemporary openness. The name is rare enough to feel individual yet rooted enough to carry genuine gravitas.