Modern invented name blending Savanna or the Indian name Sahana (patience) with Arabic phonetic styling.
Sahanna is most likely a variant spelling of Sahana, a classical Sanskrit and South Indian name meaning "patience," "endurance," or "forbearance" — from the root *sah*, to endure or bear. In the Carnatic classical music tradition of South India, Sahana is also the name of a deeply emotive raga, a melodic framework associated with devotion, longing, and tender sadness. The raga Sahana is heard in countless compositions by the saint-composers of the bhakti tradition, giving the name a rich musical lineage that extends across centuries of Indian devotional culture.
The doubled *n* and the *-a* ending in Sahanna give it a slightly more elaborate, Anglicized feel compared to the two-syllable Sahana, and may also reflect the influence of American name sounds — the *Savannah* pattern, with its warm Southern associations, likely shapes how English speakers hear and render similar phonetic landscapes. Savannah itself derives from the Taíno word *zabana*, meaning a treeless plain, and became both a beloved Georgia city name and a popular given name in the United States, particularly in the South. Sahanna navigates between these two traditions, legible to both.
As a given name in diaspora South Asian communities and among parents drawn to multicultural naming, Sahanna carries the virtue meaning of its Sanskrit root — a quality parents have always hoped to pass to children — while its sound is broad enough to feel at home in many cultural contexts. The word *patience* is among the most universally admired human qualities, present as a named virtue in Sanskrit, Arabic (sabr), Latin, and Greek traditions alike, giving Sahanna an quietly ecumenical quality beneath its particular roots.