Chyna is a modern spelling of China, taken from the place name and used as a stylish given name.
Chyna is a modern American phonetic respelling of China, the name of the world's most populous nation, itself derived from the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) through Persian and Sanskrit intermediaries — *Cīna* in Sanskrit, likely from *Qín*, the dynasty that first unified the Chinese states. The place-name entered European languages through trade routes and became, in the early modern period, synonymous with fine porcelain ("china"), a testament to the material culture that made China legendary in Western imagination.
The deliberate respelling with a *y* marks Chyna as firmly a given name rather than a geography, a common American naming practice that personalizes and reclaims. The name's most famous modern bearer is Chyna (born Joanie Laurer, 1969–2016), the professional wrestler who became a trailblazer as the first woman to compete in the men's Royal Rumble and Intercontinental Championship matches in WWE. Her ring persona — physically powerful, unflinching, nicknamed "the Ninth Wonder of the World" — gave the name a specifically late-1990s cultural resonance: strength, spectacle, and barrier-breaking.
Chyna the name peaked in American birth records around 1997–2001, riding that cultural wave. Today it carries a distinct retro imprint of that era while remaining in occasional use, particularly in communities that value its bold phonetic energy and pop-culture associations.