Certificate of Name
Daisy
Feminine
English
Meaning & Origin
Daisy is a feminine given name from the English word for the white flower, ultimately derived from Old English dægeseage meaning "day eye" — because the daisy opens its petals at dawn and closes them at dusk. The name was first used as a given name in the 19th century, during the Victorian era when floral names like Rose, Lily, and Violet became fashionable.Etymology and HistoryThe Old English dægeseage breaks down into dæg (") and eage (" the flower's bloom opened with the sun and closed at night. The daisy has sometimes been used as a nickname for Margaret; in French, the name for the oxeye daisy is marguerite, creating a parallel. Daisy came into popular use in the late 1800s and hit a peak at the turn of the 20th century. It remained fairly popular in English-speaking countries until the 1920s-1930s before declining. The name was less common during the 1970s, but it saw a minor resurgence after television character Daisy Duke (Catherine Bach) appeared on The Dukes of Hazzard (1979). Because of the tie to the motorcycle-riding cousin in cut-off jeans, the name occasionally carries a bubbly or country-vintage association. The novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald contributed to the sophisticated side of Daisy when he created Daisy Buchanan for The Great Gatsby (1925), a refined but painfully conflicted symbol of American wealth. Meanwhile, Walt Disney's Daisy Duck – a sassy 1940 introduction – made the name beloved for children.Notable Bearers and CharactersThe name Daisy appears infrequently in actual biographies but frequently in literature and popular culture, a dynamic that echoes many 19th-century flower names. In fiction, Daisy Miller (Henry James, 1878) represents naive freedom. Even historical royal figures are linked, as Queen Victoria's granddaughter Princess Margaret (born 1930) was called Daisy. Among real-life celebrities, English singer, model and rapper Daisy Ridley (born 1995 and notably silent on being the Star Wars heroine alone) helped revive the name. Many winners of pageants or musical figures carry the soft-glamour echoes.Forms and UsageIn addition to Irish and Scottish usages 1, the exact form Daisy dominates in English-speaking countries today. Slight variations in structure:Origin: Old English word for a flowerEnglish usage: especially United Kingdom, United States, AustraliaType: Given name (feminine)
Back