Modern invented blend of Ava or Avery with the popular -lyn suffix.
Avilyn joins two etymological worlds with quiet elegance. The 'Avi-' element derives from the Hebrew אָבִי ('avi'), meaning 'my father' — an intimate possessive that appears throughout the Hebrew Bible as both a prefix in names like Abigail (אֲבִיגַיִל, 'my father is joy') and as a standalone name of divine address. In contemporary Hebrew naming, Avi is used as an independent name, warm and familiar.
The '-lyn' suffix comes from the Welsh 'llyn,' meaning 'lake' or 'pool,' a suffix that has become one of the most productive in English feminine naming, appearing in Carolyn, Evelyn, Jocelyn, and Marilyn — names whose musical ending has given '-lyn' an independent life as a feminine marker. The result is a name that is simultaneously familial and natural, suggesting both the intimacy of Hebrew family naming and the still-water imagery of Welsh landscape. Evelyn, Avilyn's nearest phonetic relative, has a long literary and aristocratic history in Britain, and Avilyn inherits some of that elegant air while redirecting it with a more explicitly Hebraic first syllable.
The name also carries an aural closeness to Aveline, a medieval Norman-French name of Germanic origin meaning 'hazelnut' — adding a faint medieval echo to a name that otherwise feels entirely contemporary. Avilyn emerged as parents sought names that honored Jewish heritage while fitting comfortably into multicultural American and British naming landscapes. It achieves this beautifully — the Avi is unmistakably rooted, while the -lyn makes it immediately accessible, creating a name that is both a statement of identity and an open introduction.