A modern spelling of Sincere, from Latin sincerus meaning 'pure' or 'genuine.'
Cyncere is among the most philosophically charged names in contemporary American usage — an inventive spelling of "sincere," a word whose journey into the English language is itself a story worth telling. Sincere arrived via the French sincère, from the Latin sincerus, meaning "whole," "pure," or "genuine" — possibly derived from semel ("once") and cera ("wax"). The most evocative folk etymology holds that sincerus described marble unmixed with wax: sculptors in antiquity allegedly used wax to fill cracks in flawed stone, and sine cera — "without wax" — guaranteed you were getting the pure, unpatched article.
Whether etymologically accurate or not, the image is powerfully apt for a name that insists on authenticity as a core identity. As a given name, Cyncere belongs to a tradition of virtue names that has run through American culture since the colonial period — Prudence, Patience, Temperance — but reimagined through a distinctly contemporary African American naming aesthetic that prizes phonetic individuality and visual distinctiveness. The CY opening transforms the expected S into something more angular and assertive, while the -cere ending retains enough of the source word to make the meaning legible.
The name declares its bearer's fundamental nature before any introduction is made: this person is real, unvarnished, without wax. The name has appeared in hip-hop and R&B culture, where authenticity — being real, being genuine — carries enormous social and artistic weight. Naming a child Cyncere is an act of aspiration dressed as a statement of fact.
It stakes a claim on a virtue that is easy to admire and difficult to sustain, which is perhaps why parents who choose it tend to do so with unusual conviction. The name carries a manifesto in its syllables.