A spelling variant of Ilani or Ilana, from Hebrew roots meaning “tree.”
Ilany is a variant of the Hebrew name Ilana, formed from the word "ilan" (אילן), meaning "tree." In Hebrew, the noun carries broad connotations of strength, rootedness, and life — a tree being one of the oldest symbols of endurance in human culture. The related masculine name Ilan has been popular in Israel since the mid-twentieth century, with Ilana arising as its natural feminine counterpart.
Israeli naming culture drew enthusiastically on nature imagery from the Hebrew lexicon, and tree names in particular carried resonance in a young nation literally replanting its landscape. The form Ilany — with its distinctive "-y" ending — represents a softer, more melodic variation that has found favor particularly in Israeli and French-Jewish communities, where the suffix imparts a gentle, diminutive warmth. French Hebrew names frequently adopt this convention; the result is a name that sounds at home in Tel Aviv and Paris alike.
Ilany carries the intimacy of a nickname with the full dignity of a given name, blending informality and beauty in a single word. Beyond the Hebrew world, Ilany has attracted admirers among families seeking names that are rare in English-speaking countries but carry phonetic elegance and clear meaning. As interest in nature-rooted names has surged globally — names like Willow, Rowan, and Ash regularly topping charts — Ilany offers a path less traveled: the same organic imagery, rendered in a language and tradition that stretches back thousands of years. To be named Ilany is to be named for something ancient, rooted, and reaching toward the light.