How popular is the baby name Madeinusa in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Madeinusa.

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Popularity of the baby name Madeinusa


Posts that mention the name Madeinusa

Yesaidu, Yorkeisy: Unique Latin American names explained

Did you know that Latin American parents have created baby names out of English-language phrases and terms?

Here are some examples:

  • Yoanidis comes from “you and this”
  • Yorkeisy comes from “you are crazy”
  • Yesaidu comes from “yes I do”
  • Yesyuar comes from “yes you are”
  • Usanavy comes from “U.S. Navy”
  • Mileidi comes from “my lady”
  • Madeinusa comes from “made in U.S.A.”
  • Dalaionkin comes from “The Lion King”
  • Britnishakira is a combination of “Britney” and “Shakira”
  • Gualdisnia comes from “Walt Disney”

I found these in a News-Press article by Peruvian writer Alessia Leathers. (Unfortunately, the article — and her full list of names — is no longer online.)

No doubt names like these are spelled many different ways. I know I’ve seen several versions of “Usanavy.” For instance, in a book about Cuba (specifically, in a passage describing the influence of the United States on Cuban personal names in the mid-20th century), I spotted this sentence:

In the zones around the Guantanamo Naval Station it was not uncommon to find children named Usnavy (or Usnavito/Usnavita) after the markings of “US Navy.”

There’s also a Dominican-American character named Usnavi (pronounced oos-NAH-vee) in the musical In the Heights by Lin-Manuel Miranda.

Source: Perez, Louis A. On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality, and Culture. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999.

[Latest update: Jun. 2024]