Jenisis is a modern spelling of Genesis, from Greek genesis meaning origin, birth, or beginning.
Jenisis is a phonetic respelling of Genesis, a word whose roots reach back to the very beginning of recorded language. Genesis derives from the Greek "genesis" (origin, creation, birth), which was itself a translation of the Hebrew "Bereshit" — the first word of the Torah, meaning "in the beginning." As the title of the first book of the Bible, Genesis became synonymous with cosmic origination: the moment before which nothing existed.
In ancient Greek, the same root gave us "gene," "genealogy," and "generate." As a given name, Genesis entered American usage primarily in the 1990s and surged in the 2000s, appealing to parents who wanted a name that felt spiritually significant without being a conventional saint's name. It appeared on the Social Security top-100 list for girls by the 2010s, driven largely by Hispanic-American communities for whom biblical names carry deep cultural weight.
The name Genesis also appeared in pop culture through the British rock band Genesis (Peter Gabriel, Phil Collins) and as a Sega console that introduced a generation to video games — associations that gave the name a secular energy alongside its sacred one. Jenisis, spelled with a "J," personalizes the name while preserving its sonic identity. The "J" opening mirrors the phonetics of names like Jennifer, Jessica, and Jasmine that dominated late-twentieth-century naming charts, making Jenisis feel both familiar and distinctive. For a child born into the twenty-first century, it is a name that announces: this life is its own beginning.