Dior

💡 Meaning

Golden

🌍 Origin

French

🚼 Gender

Unisex

🔊 Pronunciation

dee-AWR /ˌdiˈɔɹ/

The story behind Dior

Dior emerged as a modern given name in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, primarily associated with the French luxury fashion house founded by Christian Dior in 1946. The surname Dior itself derives from Old French roots combining "di" (of/from) and "or" (gold), literally meaning "of gold" or relating to golden color and precious materials. This etymology aligns naturally with the glamorous, luxurious aesthetic the fashion brand cultivated worldwide.

As a baby name, Dior has no historical figures or mythological bearers predating the 21st century. Its rise as a given name coincides directly with the globalization of the Dior brand and represents a contemporary trend of naming children after luxury labels and designer brands. The name gained particular popularity among English-speaking parents in the 2010s, reflecting broader cultural shifts toward brand-influenced naming practices and aspirational naming conventions. Dior functions entirely as a modern coinage—a name created and popularized through commercial influence rather than rooted in traditional naming history, mythology, or historical personages.

✨ Quick facts

Syllables
2
Length
Short
Numerology
1
Pattern
C·V·V·C

📊 Popularity

US peak: #2469 (2010s)

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