Daisey

Meaning of Daisey

Daisey unfolds like a sunlit petal at the break of dawn, her English roots tracing back to the Old English dageseage—“day’s eye”—and blossoming into a name that evokes fields of wildflowers kissed by morning dew. In Italy, one might imagine her drifting through a Tuscan giardino, where the warm breeze carries whispers of pure-hearted innocence and the promise of new beginnings. This gentle variant of Daisy, with its playful “e” before the final “y,” hints at a whimsy all its own, as if each syllable were a soft laugh shared beneath a summer sky. Though modest in popularity—15 little Daiseys graced American birth records in 2024, placing her at 935th—she endures with the quiet confidence of a timeless bloom, bringing to mind picnics on sun-dappled hills and the effortless joy of a child dancing among the flowers.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as DAY-zee (/deɪzi/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Daisey

Sofia Ricci
Curated bySofia Ricci

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