A modern word-name spelling of Essence, from Latin-derived English meaning the inner nature or core being.
Essynce is a bold and inventive spelling of the word-name "Essence," which entered the American naming lexicon with particular energy in the late twentieth century. The underlying word derives from the Latin "essentia," itself drawn from "esse" — simply "to be." Philosophers from Aristotle onward used "essence" to describe the fundamental, irreducible core of a thing: what makes it wholly and unmistakably itself.
To name a child Essynce is therefore to declare that she is, from birth, complete — her truest self already present. Word-names like Essence, Destiny, and Harmony gained significant popularity in African American communities beginning in the 1980s and 1990s, reflecting both a creative naming tradition and a cultural assertion of beauty and aspiration. "Essence" was also the name of the iconic American magazine founded in 1970, dedicated to Black women and their culture — giving the name an additional layer of cultural resonance and pride.
The creative respelling as "Essynce" transforms the familiar word into something unmistakably personal, a visual signature that signals individuality. The phonetic spelling with the double-s and the swapped "c" for a softer visual texture reflects a broader tradition in which parents treat the written form of a name as a canvas. Essynce stands at the intersection of philosophical depth and modern American creativity — a name that makes a quiet argument that language itself belongs to everyone, to be reshaped and reimagined as needed.