Megha is a Sanskrit name meaning "cloud," giving it a natural, airy association.
Megha comes from the Sanskrit *megha*, meaning "cloud" — specifically the dark, swollen rain cloud that heralds the Indian monsoon. In a civilization where the arrival of rain determined survival, the cloud was never merely meteorological; it was divine mercy made visible. The Sanskrit word and its associations permeate classical Indian poetry: the great Sanskrit poet Kālidāsa built his most beloved work, *Meghadūta* ("The Cloud Messenger," c.
4th–5th century CE), around a yaksha who asks a passing cloud to carry a love message to his distant wife. That poem transformed *megha* into one of Sanskrit literature's most romantic images — the cloud as faithful go-between, crossing mountains and forests for love. In Hindu iconography, cloud-darkness is the color of Krishna's skin — the blue-black of monsoon sky — making *megha* a subtly devotional name as well.
Across India, particularly in Hindi, Gujarati, and Marathi-speaking regions, Megha has been a popular feminine name for generations. It carries the specific emotional texture of relief — the cool arrival of rain after scorching heat — and this gives the name a gentle but powerful resonance: life-giving, patient, beautiful in its weight. In the diaspora, Megha has proved easily pronounceable and warmly distinctive, its nature-poetry origins setting it apart from more conventional choices.