Azley is a modern English-style invented name, probably modeled on names like Ashley and Ainsley.
Azley is a contemporary name that inhabits the space where several naming traditions converge. Phonetically it echoes Ashley, the Old English place-name-turned-given-name meaning 'ash tree clearing' (from æsc, ash tree, and lēah, woodland clearing), while the opening 'Az-' lends it a distinctly modern energy — a modification that places it in conversation with Azalea (from Greek azaleos, 'dry,' the flowering shrub that thrives on acidic soil), and with the broader pattern of 'Az-' names including Azura, Azaria, and Azalee that have gained traction in the twenty-first century. The '-ley' ending is one of English's most ancient name-forming elements, derived from the Old English lēah (meadow, clearing, woodland glade), which appears in hundreds of English place names and given names: Hadley, Finley, Kinsley, Braylee.
This suffix carries a landscape quality — it places the bearer in an open, natural space — and its versatility has made it one of the most productive sounds in contemporary English name construction. Azley thus stands at an etymological crossroads: the pastoral clearing of Old English meets the vivid brightness of Arabic-inflected 'Az-' openings. As a given name, Azley reflects the creative spirit of contemporary naming: it is built from recognizable components but assembled in a way that feels new.
It offers the warmth and approachability of the familiar '-ley' ending while the 'Az-' opening gives it an edge of the distinctive. In an era when parents increasingly seek names that honor convention and individuality simultaneously, Azley accomplishes exactly that — a name that sounds both ancient in its bones and freshly minted.