If you're looking for a great name for your baby girl, then you're in just the right place. We've got tons of names that start with D here for your consideration. We've also got a few tips to help you pick out just the right name for your baby. Let's get into it!
Most Popular Baby Girl Names Starting with D
First, we'll start with the most popular baby girl names that start with D in 2023. They are:
- Dylan
- Delilah
- Damian
- Daisy
- Dakota
- Dallas
- Diana
- Delaney
- Daniela
- Daphne
- Dahlia
- Dream
- Drew
- Danna
- Devin
- Destiny
- Demi
- Dior
- Daleyza
- Daniella
Unique Baby Girl Names Starting With D in 2023
There's plenty of baby girl names that start with D that offer a certain uniqueness or rarity. Let's take a look at 15 of them:
If you don’t have your name in mind yet, don’t worry! Below we present a list of every baby girl's name — including middle names — starting with D, plus the name’s meaning and origin.
Daba through Dallas
- Daba Hebrew — kind words, bee swarm
- Dabria Latin — name of an angel
- Dacey Gaelic — The southerner. A boy or girl’s name.
- Dacia Greek — A woman from Dacia, an ancient European country.
- Dacio French — from Arcy
- Dade unknown
- Dae Korean — Greatness.
- Daffodil English from Greek — The asphodel. A flower name.
- Dagmar Old Norse — A maiden of the day, or glorious day.
- Dagna Old Norse — A new day.
- Dagny Norwegian — day, brightness, new day, Dane’s joy
- Dahlia English — From the flower, named after the Swedish botanist, Dahl.
- Dai Welsh/Japanese — Welsh: The beloved, the adored one. Japanese: Great. A boy or girl’s name.
- Daisy Old English — The day’s eye. A flower name. Also a nickname from Margaret.
- Dakin Danish — Danish
- Daksha Hindu
- Dale Teutonic/Old English — A valley dweller. A boy or girl’s name.
- Dalia — A branch, bough.
- Dalila Swahili — Gentle.
- Dallas Celtic — Skilled, or from the field of water. Also a city in Texas. A boy or girl’s name.
Damalis through Daphne
- Damalis Greek — one who gentles
- Damara Greek — gentle girl
- Damaris Greek — Gentle. A New Testament name.
- Dame German — lady
- Damiana Greek — Tame, domesticated. The feminine form of Damian/Damon.
- Damini Hindu — lightning
- Damita Spanish — The little noble lady.
- Damosel Old English — A damsel, or young unmarried woman.
- Dana Old English/Czech — Old English: From Denmark. Czech: God is my judge. A boy or girl’s name.
- Danae Greek — The mother of Perseus in Greek mythology.
- Dani — My judge.
- Danica Slavic — the morning star
- Daniela — God is my judge.
- Danielle Hebrew — God is my judge. The feminine form of Daniel.
- Danika Slavonic — The morning star.
- Dannell
- Danniell — God is my judge.
- Danu Gaelic — The goddess of fruitfulness.
- Danuta Polish — A little deer. Also, see Dana.
- Daphne Greek — The laurel. In Greek mythology, the name of a nymph who was transformed into a Laurel tree.
Dara through Daya
- Dara Irish Gaelic/Hebrew — Irish: A son of oak. Hebrew: Compassion, wisdom. A boy or girl’s name.
- Daralis Old English — beloved
- Daray unknown — dark
- Darby Irish Gaelic/Middle English — Irish Gaelic: Free from envy. Middle English: The deer settlement. A boy or girl’s name.
- Darcie Old French — An old Norman family name.
- Daria Greek — Wealthy. The feminine form of Darius.
- Darinka Slovenian
- Darlene English from Old French — The little darling, the beloved one. Also, see Darrelle.
- Darra Gaelic, Farsi — small great one, riches
- Darrelle Old French — The beloved one. The feminine form of Darrell. Also, see Darlene.
- Darrene English — The Great one. The feminine form of Darren.
- Darri Aboriginal — A track.
- Dasha Greek — gift of god
- Davan Irish — The beloved, the adored one. Feminine form of David.
- Davida — The beloved, the adored one. Feminine form of David.
- Davina Hebrew — The beloved one. The feminine form of David. Also, see Vida.
- Davine Hebrew — the loved
- Dawa Tibetan/Sherpa — Born on a Monday. A boy or girl’s name.
- Dawn English — Daybreak, dawn.
- Daya Hebrew — bird
Dayla through Deiene
- Dayla Hebrew — to draw water, a branch, or a bough
- Dayle — A valley dweller. A boy or girl’s name.
- Deana — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology. Also feminine forms of Dean.
- Deanna — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology. Also feminine forms of Dean.
- Deanne — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology. Also feminine forms of Dean.
- Debbie — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Debby — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Deborah Hebrew — The bee, an industrious woman. A biblical name.
- Debra — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Dechen Tibetan/Sherpa — Health and happiness.
- Decima Latin — The tenth.
- Dee — From the name Audrey, Deirdre, Delia, Diana. Audrey – Strong and noble, regal. Deirdre – Sorrow. Delia – A woman from the island of Delos. Diana – The divine one.
- Deena Hindu
- Deepali Hindu
- Deepika Hindu — a little light
- Deepti Hindu
- Deeta — The lost one.
- Deianira Greek — wife of heracles
- Deidra — Sorrowful, wanderer.
- Deiene Basque — religious holiday
Deion through Delwyn
- Deion
- Deiondre — Valley.
- Deirdre Celtic — Sorrow. The name of a character from Irish legend.
- Deja French — before
- Delanna Italian — soft as wool
- Delbin Greek — dolphin, flower name
- Delcine — Sweet.
- Delfina — Dolphin.
- Delia Greek — A woman from the island of Delos. Also another name for Artemis, the Greek moon goddess. Also See Cordelia and Della.
- Delicia Latin — Delight.
- Delila — Hair or poor.
- Delilah Hebrew — The beautiful temptress. The lover of Samson in the Bible.
- Dell English — From the dell or hollow. A boy or girl’s name.
- Della English — A woman from the island of Delos. Probably derived from Delia or Delilah and Ella. Also a diminutive of Adele and Adelaide.
- Delma Spanish — Of the sea.
- Delphine Latin — A woman from Delphi or a flower name from delphinium.
- Delta Greek — The fourth, as in a fourth child.
- Delvene — A woman from Delphi or a flower name from delphinium.
- Delvine — A woman from Delphi or a flower name from delphinium.
- Delwyn Old English/Welsh — Old English: A friend from the valley. Welsh: Neat and fair. A boy or girl’s name.
Delyth through Deva
- Delyth Welsh — Neat and pretty.
- Dembe Ugandan — peace
- Demelza Cornish — From a placename. The heroine of Winston Graham’s Poldark novels.
- Demetria Greek — From the goddess of fertility.
- Demi Latin — Half. Also see Demetria.
- Dena Old English — From the valley. Feminine form of Dean.
- Denise French from Greek — A lover of wine. The feminine form of Denis/Dennis.
- Dep Vietnamese — beautiful
- Derica — Beloved leader.
- Derryth Welsh — Of the Oak.
- Dervla Irish Gaelic — The daughter of the poet.
- Desana — Longed for.
- Desdemona Greek — Ill-fated. A Shakespearian character murdered by her husband Othello.
- Desiree Latin — The desired one.
- Desma Greek — A pledge.
- Despina Greek
- Desta Ethiopian — Happiness.
- Destinee French — destiny
- Destry French — war horse
- Deva — Celestial spirit.
Devaki through Diella
- Devaki Hindu — black, mother of Krishna
- Devi Breton/Sanskrit — Breton: The beloved, the adored one. Sanskrit: Godlike, a goddess. A boy or girl’s name.
- Devika Sanskrit — A little goddess.
- Devnet Swedish — home of the Danes
- Devona Old English — From the county of Devon.
- Devora Jewish — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Devorah Jewish — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Devore — The bee, an industrious woman.
- Dextra Latin — Skilful, dexterous. The feminine form of Dexter.
- Dharmista Hindu
- Diamanta French from Latin — Adamant, like a diamond.
- Diana Latin — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology.
- Diane French — The divine one.
- Dianne — The divine one.
- Diantha Greek — A divine flower.
- Dianthe — Flower of the Gods.
- Diarria Greek — Didi
- Dido Greek — The name of a queen of Carthage.
- Didrika Teutonic — The people’s ruler.
- Diella Latin — worships god
Dierdre through Dixie
- Dierdre Celtic — young girl, one who rages, broken-hearted
- Dietlinde German
- Dieuwertje unknown
- Diki Tibetan/Sherpa — Healthy and wealthy.
- Dikranouhi Armenian — queen
- Dilek Turkish
- Dillian Latin — worshipped one
- Dilys Welsh — True, steadfast.
- Dimity Greek — From the cotton material.
- Dina Irish Gaelic — From the name Dean. Latin: A soldier. Tuetonic: Merciful.
- Dinah Hebrew — Judgment. A biblical name.
- Dione Greek — A lover of wine. From Dionysus, the mythological God of wine and drama. A boy or girl’s name.
- Dionne — The divine one.
- Dionyza Latin — From Shakespeare’s play Pericles.
- Dirran Arabic
- Disa Greek — Double.
- Dita — The lost one.
- Diva Latin — A goddess.
- Divya Hindu — heavenly, brilliant
- Dixie French — The tenth. Also a girl from the American south.
Dobrila through Dora
- Dobrila Slavonic — Kind, good.
- Dodie Hebrew — Beloved. Also see Dorothy.
- Doe unknown — Dee Dee, Didi
- Dohna Tibetan/Sherpa — A female deity.
- Dolkar Tibetan/Sherpa — The name of a Buddhist Goddess.
- Dollie — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Dolly — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Dolores Spanish — Sorrow. Derived from the seven sorrows of the Virgin Mary.
- Dominga Spanish — Sunday
- Dominica Latin — Belonging to the lord. The feminine form of Dominic.
- Dominique — Of God.
- Donalda Scottish Gaelic — The ruler of the world. The feminine form of Donald.
- Donata Latin — Given by God, a gift.
- Doneen
- Donella — The ruler of the world. The feminine form of Donald.
- Donelle — The ruler of the world. The feminine form of Donald.
- Donla Irish Gaelic — The brown lady.
- Donna Italian — A lady. A short form of Madonna.
- Dooriya English — the sea
- Dora Greek — A gift. Originally a short form of Dorothy and Theodora, but now also used as an independent name.
Dorcas through Drusilla
- Dorcas Greek — A gazelle, a doe. Also see Tabitha.
- Dore French — Golden.
- Doreen — A gift. Originally a short form of Dorothy and Theodora, but now also used as an independent name.
- Doria Greek — place name
- Dorinda Greek — gift of god, beautiful one
- Doris Greek — A woman from Doria, or from the ocean. A Greek goddess of the sea.
- Dorota Greek, Spanish — God’s gift
- Dorothea Dutch — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Dorothy Greek — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Dot — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Dotty — The gift of God. Also, see Dora and Theodora.
- Douce French — Gentle, sweet.
- Dova Teutonic — Peace, a dove.
- Dreama Greek — joyous music
- Drew Celtic — Courageous. A boy or girl’s name.
- Drina Spanish — helper and defender of mankind
- Drisana Hindu — daughter of the sun
- Dristi Hindu — sight, a form of the Devi
- Druella Teutonic — An elfin vision.
- Drusilla Latin — From an old Roman family name.
Druti through Dysthe
- Druti Hindu
- Duana Irish Gaelic — A little dark maiden.
- Duena Spanish — A chaperone.
- Dulce — Sweet.
- Dulcea — Sweet.
- Dulcie Latin — Sweet.
- Dulcina — Rose.
- Dulcinea — Sweet.
- Durga Sanskrit — Unattainable. A mythological Hindu goddess.
- Dusana Czech — A spirit, a soul.
- Dusty — Warrior. Feminine form of Dustin.
- Dyan — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology.
- Dyana — The divine one. The goddess of hunting and the moon in Roman mythology.
- Dyani Native American — A deer.
- Dyanne — The divine one.
- Dymphna Irish Gaelic — A fawn.
- Dyna Greek — Powerful. Also see Dinah.
- Dysis Greek — sunset
- Dysthe Greek
Tips for Picking a Baby Name
Picking a baby's name can be a tough thing. Check out some of our tips for picking out just the right name for your upcoming child:
- The must-have convenient reference guide for every home cook!
- Includes more than 8,000 substitutions for ingredients, cookware, and techniques.
- Save time and money on by avoiding trips to grab that "missing" ingredient you don't really need.
Start early. You want to give yourself ample time to pick a baby name. Don't wait until the last minute, since then you'll be stressed and pushed to pick a name. Think about starting this endeavor during your second trimester. By then, your risk of miscarriage is low. Definitely don't wait until halfway through your third trimester to start!
Look to your passions for inspiration. Do you have a favorite movie, T.V. show, or book series that you could draw inspiration from? What about a favorite video game? Or, perhaps there's a celebrity or historical figure you'd like to name your child after. These are all great sources of inspiration.
Don't overcomplicate it. While picking a name can be challenging at times, don't make it unnecessarily complicated for yourself. Your baby doesn't need to have the most unique name ever to stand out! If you're finding that you're unable to settle on a name after weeks or months of deliberation, you may need to change up the process.
Conclusion
We hope you found a name or two you like out of this list! If not, don't fret. We've got a list for every letter of the alphabet, so be sure to check those out. Congratulations on your upcoming baby! This is such an exciting time for you; make sure to take time to appreciate it and enjoy it.
The image featured at the top of this post is ©Zoia Kostina/Shutterstock.com.
- The must-have convenient reference guide for every home cook!
- Includes more than 8,000 substitutions for ingredients, cookware, and techniques.
- Save time and money on by avoiding trips to grab that "missing" ingredient you don't really need.