Flurina is from the Romansh flur (flower) + feminine -ina suffix — "flowering one, little flower." A modern American baby name in the broader Swiss-Romansh heritage aesthetic. Flurina in Romansh tradition — Romansh is one of the four official languages of Switzerland (alongside German, French, and Italian) — spoken by approximately 60,000 people primarily in the canton of Graubünden in southeastern Switzerland; one of the few surviving Rhaeto-Romance languages descended directly from Vulgar Latin; UNESCO classifies Romansh as endangered; the foundational Romansh cultural revival movement has worked to preserve Romansh through media including the daily Romansh-language newspaper La Quotidiana and the Romansh public broadcaster Radiotelevisiun Svizra Rumantscha (RTR); the Flurina name reflects the broader Romansh cultural preservation movement. **Schellen-Ursli (1945) — iconic Swiss-Romansh children's book by Selina Chönz and illustrated by Alois Carigiet; the iconic sister character is named Flurina in the original Romansh version; one of the foundational works of Swiss children's literature, sold 2+ million copies; the iconic 2015 Swiss film adaptation reignited interest in the Flurina name across Switzerland. Flurina Badel (born 1983) — Swiss-Romansh poet; one of the foundational modern Romansh-language literary voices. Princess Flurina** — modern Swiss heritage naming.
Featured throughout Swiss-Romansh heritage.
Flurina reduces to five.