Combination of Rose (Latin 'rosa') and Lee (English, meadow), meaning rose of the meadow.
Rosealee is a compound floral name, marrying the timeless Rose — from the Latin *rosa* and ultimately the Proto-Indo-European root for thorny plants — with the suffix *lee*, derived from the Old English *leah*, meaning a woodland clearing or meadow. The combination conjures a specific pastoral image: roses blooming at the edge of an open field, sunlit and unhurried. It belongs to a tradition of elaborate, hyphenated or fused floral names most common in the American South and rural Appalachia, where names like Rosalie, Rosalee, and Rosealee were layered onto daughters as a form of blessing.
Rosalee and its variants have appeared in folk songs, country ballads, and gospel hymns for over a century — the name of the girl left behind, the girl who waits faithfully, the girl whose memory sweetens a weary traveler's road. This literary and musical lineage gives Rosealee a warmth that feels hand-stitched rather than printed, intimate rather than formal. The extra 'a' in Rosealee deepens the vowel sound and slows the name down pleasantly, giving it a slight drawl even in writing.
Today Rosealee represents a revival of Victorian-era floral romanticism filtered through American folk tradition. It appeals to parents drawn to nature names but wanting something more elaborate than plain Rose — a name with a story already embedded in its syllables.