A creative spelling of Genesis, from Greek genesis meaning origin, birth, or creation.
Genessis is an elaborated spelling of Genesis, a name rooted in the ancient Greek word genesis, meaning "origin," "birth," or "coming into being." The Greek term itself was used to translate the Hebrew Bereshit — "in the beginning" — making this the name of the very first book of the Bible, the foundational creation narrative shared across Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions. To name a child Genesis (or Genessis) is to invoke the idea of a new beginning, a fresh start, a world called into existence.
As a given name, Genesis emerged in English-speaking countries in the late twentieth century, buoyed by a broader trend of using meaningful English-language words as names. The band Genesis, formed in 1967, gave the word a rock-and-roll cultural currency that ran alongside its spiritual weight. The name grew especially popular in Latino communities in the United States, where it was often spelled Génesis and carried a deeply devotional resonance.
Genessis, with its doubled central 's,' is a further personalization — a spelling that makes the name visually unique on the page while preserving its soaring sound. The double-s variant signals the ongoing creativity parents bring to established names, ensuring a child's name is recognizably their own. Genessis carries both cosmic gravity — origins, creation, the beginning of all things — and an intimate tenderness, the idea that each child is their own universe beginning.