Dilbert
Masculine
Popular Culture
Meaning & Origin
Dilbert is a fictional character, the title protagonist of the satirical comic strip of the same name created by American cartoonist Scott Adams. The name was coined specifically for the comic, first published on April 16, 1989. Its precise meaning is unknown, but the ending appears to mimic the common Germanic name element bert (from Old High German beraht), meaning "bright." This suffix is present in many Germanic names like Albert and Robert, lending the name a familiar, "real-person" quality despite its invented nature.
Origin and Context
Adams chose the name Dilbert (which also appears as a family name, deriving from the English placename Dilworth) because it sounded mundane and vaguely technical, fitting the ordinary engineer persona of the character. The comic strip gained enormous popularity during the 1990s for its sharp and humorous commentary on office life, bureaucracy, and corporate management.
Notable Bearers
While the name is not traditionally a given name, its sole notable bearer is the fictional character Dilbert, an underappreciated, socially awkward engineer. The strip was syndicated in over 2,000 newspapers across 65 countries, leading to numerous books, an animated television series (1999-2000), and various merchandise. In 1997, Adams received the National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award.
In 2023, many newspapers dropped the strip after Adams published a video containing controversial racial remarks, impacting the name's distribution in media.
Meaning: Unknown, with "bright" implied by the -bert element
Origin: American popular culture
Type: Invented given name; partly modeled on Germanic masculine names
Usage: Primarily known via the comic strip, outside traditional naming