Modern invented name, likely an elaboration of Jaliya or Jaliyah, used in contemporary African American naming traditions.
Jalaiah entered broad public awareness in early 2020 when Jalaiah Harmon, a fourteen-year-old from Lithonia, Georgia, was widely credited as the creator of the "Renegade" dance that became the most viral TikTok trend of that year. Her story — a Black teenage girl whose creative work was widely copied without credit before a New York Times investigation helped restore her attribution — became a cultural touchstone about authorship, race, and the economics of social media creativity. Her name, previously little known, suddenly appeared on the public stage attached to a narrative about talent, justice, and resilience.
Etymologically, Jalaiah connects to a family of names built on the Semitic root j-l-y, meaning "to reveal," "to be exalted," or "to ascend." Related names include Jaliyah, Jalia, and the Arabic Jaliya, all suggesting elevation or manifestation. The -iah suffix places it in the tradition of Hebrew theophoric names — names ending in the divine name Yah — giving it a spiritual resonance that links it to names like Jeremiah, Isaiah, and the popular feminine Aaliyah.
The construction feels simultaneously Arabic, Hebrew, and thoroughly contemporary American. As a given name, Jalaiah is rare enough to feel distinctive while sitting comfortably within a recognizable phonetic neighborhood. Its blend of the strong J- opening, flowing interior vowels, and the ceremonial -iah ending gives it both strength and lyricism. Since 2020, its association with Jalaiah Harmon has made it a name some parents choose to honor creativity, Black cultural production, and a young woman who quietly changed what a generation dances to.