Pronounced DAY-lah, Daila glides onto the scene like a sun-washed flamenco skirt—light, vivid, and impossible to ignore. Linguists trace her earliest footprints to the Baltic word dailus, “pretty” or “artful,” yet she’s happily picked up a dash of Latin flair on her travels, so many Spanish-speakers hear “¡Qué bella!” when the name drifts by. Storytellers in Lithuania whisper that Daila once painted the morning sky for the gods, which may explain why modern parents see her as a muse for creativity and quiet strength. In the United States she stays just outside the Top 800—hovering in the 850-950 range most years—like a firefly at dusk: close enough to catch, but never common enough to lose her sparkle. Daila carries the breezy charm of daybreak and the steadiness of a lifelong friend, making her a sweet gift to a daughter who’s destined to color outside every line.