Landin means from the long hill or grassy plain — the IN-ending variant of Landon, from the Old English. Same long-hill, IN-calligraphy. Two syllables of Old English long-hill through IN-ending flowing distinction.
Same long hill with IN-ending distinction.Two syllables with a warm, English sound: LAN-din.Land and In are both embedded.The IN gives flowing distinction.The Old English heritage gives depth.
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The vibe of Landin
long hillgrassy plainIN-endingLandonOld EnglishwarmflowingLand-Invisual distinction
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Origin & history of Landin
Old English lang (long) + dun (hill)→IN Landin
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ModernAmerican / Multicultural roots
Landin IS the IN-ending variant of Landon meaning long hill.
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First recorded
Earliest known use: IN-ending variant.
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Today
Landin remains a beloved choice, ranking #3438 in the US. 2,663 babies have been named Landin since 1983.
◈ Sources: Behind the Name, SSA data
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How popular is Landin?
2007peak year
Landin has been losing ground. Once far more common, it has been declining steadily in recent years. It currently ranks well outside the top 1,000 (around #3438), with about 41 babies named Landin each year. In 2007, 228 babies received the name (ranked #884). Total registrations across all years since 1880: roughly 2,663.
Year-by-year registrations1880–2024 · U.S. Social Security data
Landin's Life Path 5 is the adventurer's number — IN adventure. People named Landin tend to be warm, flowing, and gifted at IN-ending Old English long-hill distinction.
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