Kaari is used in Nordic naming traditions and can relate to forms meaning pure, beloved, or curved like an arc.
Kaari is a Finnish given name, a variant of the Scandinavian Kari, which itself derives from the Old Norse Kári — a name borne by the wind personified, a son of the giant Fornjótr in Norse mythology who fathered the winds and gales. This mythological lineage gives Kaari an elemental quality, a name literally born of the air and movement. In Finnish and Nordic naming culture, Kari has functioned as both a masculine and feminine name depending on the country and era, with the double-a spelling Kaari marking a particularly Finnish orthographic sensibility.
Finnish has long been fascinated by nature-rooted names, and Kaari fits naturally into a tradition that includes names like Aino, Aura, and Pilvi (cloud). In Finland, the word *kaari* also means "arch" or "arc" — as in the arc of the sky or a rainbow — lending the name an additional layer of visual poetry entirely native to the Finnish language. This overlap between the Scandinavian wind-name and the Finnish word for arc creates a quietly beautiful double meaning.
As a given name outside Scandinavia and Finland, Kaari remains extremely rare, which makes it a genuinely distinctive discovery. Its double-a spelling signals its Nordic origins immediately to those familiar with Finnish orthography, while its pronunciation — roughly "KAH-ri" — is intuitive and clean. For parents drawn to Scandinavian naming aesthetics, Kaari offers the same open simplicity as Astrid or Sigrid but with a softer, more elemental resonance — something between the arc of a wave and the curve of the horizon.