Modern stylized variant of Aaliyah, from Arabic 'ali' meaning high, exalted, or sublime.
Zaaliyah is a variant spelling of Aaliyah, one of the most musically resonant names in contemporary American culture. The root is Arabic: *ʿāliyah* (عَالِيَة), a feminine adjective meaning "exalted," "high," "lofty," or "sublime." In Islamic tradition *al-ʿAlī* (the Most High) is one of the ninety-nine names of God, giving *ʿāliyah* a reverential quality that has made it a beloved name across the Arab world, South Asia, and East and West Africa wherever Islam spread.
The name has been in continuous use for over a millennium. In the United States, Aaliyah rose to widespread prominence through the singer and actress Aaliyah Haughton (1979–2001), whose three-album career redefined R&B and whose influence on production aesthetics, choreography, and the merging of hip-hop and soul continues to be felt decades after her death in a plane crash at twenty-two. Her name became not just popular but iconic — a word that carries grief and beauty in equal measure for a generation of listeners.
Spellings multiplied as the name spread: Aliyah, Alia, Aleah, Aaliya, and Zaaliyah among them, each a slightly different handwriting of the same exalted meaning. The Z-initial spelling of Zaaliyah is the most unusual variant, giving the name an assertive opening that sets it apart visually on a page while preserving the flowing sound. It is a name that announces itself before it is spoken.