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Baby Girl Names Starting With D

There are 8 girl names starting with D in our curated list, drawn from 5 traditions (greek, hebrew, irish, love, spanish). Standouts include Dafna, Daniela, and Daphne — each carrying a distinct etymology.

Cultural sweep of the theme

Names beginning with D cut across 5 of the major naming traditions we cover. Across origins, D carries certain phonetic and historical weight: it is one of the more melodic and tactile sounds in English, and that's part of why so many traditions have built names around it. Some letters skew classical (think Latin or Greek roots), others skew modern, and D sits broadly across both.

The list

Dafna
laurel
Daniela
God is my judge
Daphne
laurel tree
Davina
beloved
Deborah
bee
Deirdre
sorrowful
Demeter
mother earth
Ditza
joy

Middle name and sibling pairing

D-names work well with middle names that start with a different letter to avoid alliteration overload — pair a longer D first name with a single-syllable middle name (or vice versa) to balance the rhythm. For sibling sets, mixing letters reads as intentional; matching them (D + D) reads as a deliberate theme.

What to consider before committing

A D-name choice depends less on the letter itself than on the specific name's heritage, popularity trend, and how it sounds with your last name. Say each candidate out loud with the surname before committing — letter-based shortlists are a starting point, not the finish line.

Still looking? Try our Baby Name Finder tool.

Filter by origin, meaning, popularity, and gender to narrow your shortlist. Save your favorites and download as a PDF.

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How to pick a name

A great name balances three things: it sounds right with your last name, it carries meaning you can share with your child later, and it works at every stage of life — daycare nametag, school yearbook, job interview, dinner party introduction. Say each shortlist name out loud with your last name. Imagine yourself shouting it across a park. The right one usually emerges.

If you're choosing across two cultures, consider names that travel well — short, phonetic spellings; broadly pronounceable across languages. Names with deep cultural roots feel grounded even if the rest of life is global.