David (name)
David | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | /ˈdeɪvɪd/ |
Gender | Male |
Origin | |
Word/name | Hebrew |
Meaning | "beloved" |
Look up David in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
David is a common masculine given name of Biblical Hebrew origin. King David is a character of central importance in the Hebrew Bible and in both Christian and Jewish religious tradition.
Hebrew: דָּוִד, Modern David, Tiberian Dāwîḏ has the meaning of "beloved", from a root דּוֹד dôwd, which had an etymological meaning of "to boil" but survives in Biblical Hebrew only in figurative usage "to love", and specifically a term for an uncle (father's brother).[1] In Christian tradition, the name was adopted as Syriac: ܕܘܝܕ Dawid, Greek Δαυίδ, Latin Davidus. The Quranic spelling is داوُد Dāwūd.
David was adopted as a Christian name from an early period, e.g. David of Wales (6th century), David Saharuni (7th century), David I of Iberia (9th century). Name days are celebrated on 8 February (for David IV of Georgia), 1 March (for St. David of Wales) and 29 December (for King David), as well as 25 June (St. David of Sweden), 26 June, 9 July (Russia) 26 August, 11 December, and 30 December (Hungary, Latvia, Norway).
Hypocorisms
The oldest, most popular and most commonly used diminutive form in the English speaking countries of "David" is "Dave", which first appeared in written form in the 16th century. The nickname "Dave" has been used as a name in its own right in the 19th and 20th centuries, at least in the U.S. At the height of its popularity in the 1950s and early 1960s, the name Dave was bestowed upon more than 3,000 infants each year.[2]
Other common English-language hypocorisms of the name David are Davey, Davie, and Davy. The Welsh Dafydd is also abbreviated Dewi, Dai, and Daf[3]
In Ashkenazi Jewish culture, common hypocorisms of Dovid are Dovi and Dov. Dudi is a common hypocorism in Modern Hebrew.[4]
Davo is also used as a nickname, and is quite common in Australia and Armenia, while the nickname Dato (for Davit) is popular in the country of Georgia.
Feminine forms
Feminine forms of the name include Davida, Davetta, and Davina. The girl's name Davinia may derive from David, but it has also been considered a derivation from the Gaelic Devin or a variant of Lavinia.
Statistics
- United Kingdom: David was the most popular masculine given name in Northern Ireland for newborns in 1975 and dropped to a fluctuating rank around 20th in the first few years of the 21st century.[5]
- United States: David is the second most popular masculine name in the United States. 10,905,563 (1 out of 28) Americans are named David. Approximately 92,597 Davids are born each year.[6]
People with the given name
Medieval
Late antiquity to early medieval
David was adopted as a Christian name from at least the 6th century.
- David the Invincible (6th century), Neoplatonic philosopher
- David (commentator) (6th century), Greek scholar
- Saint David (6th century), patron saint of Wales
- David Saharuni (7th century), presiding prince of Byzantine-controlled Armenia
- David I of Iberia (d. 881)
- David II of Iberia (d. 937)
- David of Bulgaria (d. 976), Bulgarian noble
- David III of Tao (d. 1000)
High medieval
- Saint David of Muscovy or Gleb (987–1015), brother of Saint Roman of Muscovy or Boris, and son of Saint Vladimir
- David of Taman, late 10th century Khazar ruler
- David (Da'ud), 11th-century ruler of the Seljuk Turks
- David of Munktorp (died c. 1082)
- David I of Scotland (d. 1153), Roman Catholic saint
- David of Makuria (ruled c. 1268–1272), ruler of Makuria (in what is now Egypt and Sudan)
- Kings of Georgia:
- David IV of Georgia (d. 1125)
- David V of Georgia (d. 1155)
- David VI of Georgia (d. 1293)
- David VII of Georgia (d. 1270)
- David VIII of Georgia (d. 1311)
Late medieval and early modern
- David II of Scotland (1324 – 22 February 1371)
- Kings of Georgia:
- David IX of Georgia (d. 1360)
- David X of Kartli (d. 1526)
- David XI of Kartli (d. 1579)
- Davit as a name adopted by Emperors of Ethiopia:
- David I or Dawit I of Ethiopia (1382 – 6 October 1413)
- David II or Dawit II of Ethiopia (1501 – September 2, 1540)
- David III or Dawit III of Ethiopia (8 February 1716 – 18 May 1721)
- David Bek (d. 1728), Armenian military commander
Modern
Actors
- David Ames (born 1983), English actor
- David Anders (born 1981), American actor
- David Arquette (born 1971), American actor, director, producer
- David Battley (1935–2003), British actor
- David Boreanaz (born 1969), American actor
- David Carradine (1936–2009), American actor
- David Caruso (born 1956), American actor
- Dave Chappelle (born 1973), American comedian
- David Abraham Cheulkar (1909–1981), Indian actor known as "David"
- David Cross (born 1964), American actor
- David Conrad (born 1967), American actor
- David Dayan Fisher, American actor
- David DeLuise (born 1971), American actor
- David Dorfman (born 1993), American actor
- David Duchovny (born 1960), American actor
- Dave Foley (born 1963), Canadian actor/Comedian
- David Gasman, American actor and director
- David Hasselhoff (born 1952), American actor, singer, songwriter
- David Hemmings (1941–2003), British actor
- David Henrie, American actor
- David Hewlett (born 1968), English-born Canadian actor, writer, director and voice actor
- David Jason (born 1940), British actor
- David Kaye (born 1964), Canadian actor
- David Keith (born 1954), American actor
- David Kross (born 1990), German actor
- David Lander (born 1947), American actor, comedian, composer, musician and baseball scout
- David Letterman (born 1947), American comedian
- Dave Mallow, American actor
- David McCallum (born 1933), Scottish actor
- David Mitchell (comedian) (born 1974), British comedian, actor and writer
- David Moscow (born 1974), American actor
- David Niven (1910–1983), English actor
- David Nykl (born 1967), Czech-born Canadian actor
- David Oakes (born 1983), English actor
- David Palffy (born 1969), Canadian actor
- David Reivers (born 1958), American actor
- David Schwimmer (born 1966), American actor
- David Soul (born 1943), British-American actor
- David Spade (born 1964), American comic actor
- David Ogden Stiers (born 1942), American actor and musician
- David Tennant (born 1971), Scottish actor
- David Thewlis (born 1963), English actor
- David Tomlinson (1917–2000), English actor
- David Walliams (born 1971), British comedy actor
- David Wain (born 1969), American comedian
- Dave Wittenberg (born 1971), American actor
- Jude Law (born 1972 as David Jude Heyworth Law), British actor
Biologists
- David Attenborough (born 1926), English broadcaster and naturalist
- David Bellamy (born 1933), British author and environmental campaigner
- David J. Lipman, Director of the National Center for Biotechnology Information
- David Suzuki (born 1936), Japanese Canadian science broadcaster and environmental activist
Politicians
- David Ben-Gurion, first Prime Minister of Israel
- David Blunkett, British MP
- David Byrne (Irish politician) (born 1947), Irish and European official
- David Cameron (born 1966), British Prime Minister
- Dwight David Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States
- David Grimes, former member of the Alabama House of Representatives
- David Lam (real estate entrepreneur), Canada's first Asian-Canadian Lieutenant-Governor
- David Laws (born 1965), British MP
- David Lloyd George, Welsh Liberal Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1916–1922
- David Miliband (born 1965), British MP
- David Owen (born 1938), UK politician, Labour Foreign Secretary (1977–1979); SDP founder, and leader (1983–1987)
- David Shaw (UK politician) (born 1950), accountant, British Conservative politician
- David Steel, (born 1938), UK politician, leader of Liberal Party (1976–1988)
Musicians
- Dave Abbruzzese (born 1968), American drummer with Pearl Jam
- David Archuleta (born 1990), 2008 American Idol (TV show) runner-up
- David Arkenstone (born 1952), new age composer
- David Bowie (1947-2016), British rock singer, songwriter, producer
- David Brubeck (1920–2012), American jazz pianist and composer
- David Byrne (born 1952), musician and former Talking Heads frontman
- Dave Clark (born 1942), drummer with UK band The Dave Clark Five
- David Clayton Thomas (born 1941) lead singer for Blood Sweat & Tears
- David Cook (born 1982), 2008 American Idol (TV show) winner
- David Coverdale (born 1951) British hard rock vocalist
- David Crowder (born 1971), singer of a 6-piece Christian electronic rock and worship band from Waco, Texas
- David & David, 1980s pop group consisting of two men named David
- Dave Davies (born 1947), lead guitarist and vocalist of the Kinks
- David Desrosiers (born 1980), member of Simple Plan
- David Draiman (born 1973), vocalist of the band Disturbed
- Dave Edmunds (born 1944), Welsh singer, guitarist and record producer
- Dave Ellefson (born 1964), member of Megadeth
- David H. Evans (born 1961), known as The Edge, guitarist in Irish rock band U2
- David Essex (born 1947), English singer-songwriter and actor
- David Gahan (born 1962), lead singer of the band Depeche Mode
- David Garrett (born 1981), German-American classical violinist and recording artist
- David Gilmour (born 1946), British rock singer-songwriter
- David Gray (born 1968), British rock singer-songwriter
- Dave Grohl (born 1969), American drummer with Nirvana, then Foo Fighters
- Dave Grusin (born 1934), American composer of The Goonies
- Davey Havok (born 1975), American vocalist of the band AFI
- Davy Jones (1945–2012), actor and singer-songwriter with The Monkees
- Dave Lombardo (born 1965), drummer for Slayer
- Dave Matthews (born 1967), South African-born singer, guitarist
- Dave Mustaine (born 1961), member of Metallica and Megadeth
- David Nail (born 1979), country singer
- Dave Navarro (born 1967), guitarist with Jane's Addiction and Red Hot Chili Peppers
- David Nevue (born 1965), solo piano composer and a pianist
- Dave O'Higgins (born 1964), British jazz saxophonist
- David Paich (born 1954), keyboardist of Grammy-winning band Toto
- David Pybus, bassist of British heavy metal group Cradle of Filth
- David Lee Roth (born 1953), American rock singer-songwriter
- Dave Rowntree (born 1964), drummer of Blur
- David Silveria (born 1972), former drummer of KoRn
- David A. Stewart (born 1952), Eurythmics and Dave Stewart and the Spiritual Cowboys
- David Ray Stephens (born 1961), independent singer/songwriter
- Dave Swarbrick (born 1941), English folk musician and singer-songwriter
- David Tao, (born 1969), Taiwanese singer-songwriter
- David Usher (born 1966), British rock singer-songwriter
Athletes
- David Abrard (born 1976), French butterfly swimmer
- David Alaba, Austrian footballer
- David Albelda, Spanish footballer
- David Álvarez Aguirre, Spanish naturalized Equatoguinean footballer
- David Ambler (ice hockey) (born 1979), Canadian ice hockey player and coach
- David Andersen, Australian professional basketball player
- Dave Andreychuk, Canadian ice hockey player
- David Artell, English footballer
- David Aucagne, French rugby union player
- Dave Batista, American professional wrestler
- David Beckham, English footballer
- David Belle, French founder of Parkour
- David Ben Dayan, Israeli football player (Hapoel Tel Aviv & national team)
- David Bentley, English footballer
- David Binn, American football All-Pro long snapper (San Diego Chargers)
- David Bishop (Athlete), British junior athlete
- David Blair (rugby player), Edinburgh rugby player
- David Blatt, Israeli-American basketball player and coach
- David Blu (formerly "Bluthenthal"), American and Israeli Euroleague basketball forward (Maccabi Tel Aviv)
- David Boston (born 1978), American football player
- David Byrne (English footballer) (born 1961), English football player
- David Byrne (South African footballer), (born c. 1961), South African soccer player and coach
- David Carney, Australian footballer
- David Chaussinand, French hammer thrower
- David Cloke, Australian rules footballer
- David Coulthard, Scottish Formula One racer
- David de Gea, Spanish footballer
- David Douillet, French judo athlete
- David Dunn, English footballer
- David Eckstein, American baseball (Toronto Blue Jays, Cardinals 2006 World Series MVP)
- David Ferrer, Spanish tennis player
- David Foucault, Canadian gridiron football player
- David Freese, American baseball player
- David de Gea, Spanish footballer, goalkeeper playing for Manchester United
- David Ginola, French footballer
- David Gower, English cricketer
- David Gower (rugby league), Australian Rugby League player
- David Hala, Australian Rugby League player
- David Healy (footballer), Northern Ireland international footballer
- Dave Hiscock, New Zealand professional motorcycle racer (1970s–80s)
- David Jack, English football manager
- David James (footballer), English footballer
- David Jarolím, Czech footballer
- David Klemmer, Australian Rugby League player
- David Lane (cricketer), Montserratian cricketer
- David Lee (basketball), American basketball player
- David Legwand, American professional ice hockey player
- David Lighty, American college basketball player (Ohio State University)
- David Lipsky, golfer
- David Logan (basketball), Polish basketball player
- David Lyons (swimmer), American swimmer
- Dave Magadan, American baseball player
- David Mark Berger, American-born Israeli, Maccabiah champion (middleweight); killed by terrorists in the Munich Massacre
- David McCray, German basketballer
- David McDuling, Australian Rugby Union player
- David Monasterio, Puerto Rican swimmer
- David Moyes, Scottish football manager
- David Murphy (disambiguation), multiple people
- David N'Gog, French footballer
- David Nalbandian, Argentine tennis player
- David Neitz, Australian rules footballer
- David Nemirovsky, Canadian hockey right wing (CSKA Moscow)
- David Nofoaluma, Australian Rugby League player
- David O'Leary, Irish football manager
- David Odonkor, German footballer
- David Ortiz, Dominican baseball player (Boston Red Sox)
- David Pizarro, Chilean footballer
- David Pleat, English football manager Tottenham Hotspur, Luton Town)
- David Rhys-Jones, Australian rules footballer
- Dave Roberts (pitcher), American major league baseball pitcher
- David Robinson (basketball), American former basketball player
- David Rundqvist (born 1993), Swedish ice hockey player
- David Seaman, English football goalkeeper
- David Shaw (American football) (born 1972), Stanford Cardinal football head coach
- David Shaw (Australian footballer) (born 1938), Australian footballer
- David Shaw (Canadian football) (born 1953), Canadian football player
- David Shaw (cricketer) (born 1967), English cricketer
- David Shaw (diver) (1954–2005), Australian scuba diver
- David Shaw (footballer) (born 1948), English footballer
- David Shaw (ice hockey) (born 1964), Canadian hockey player
- David Silva, Spanish footballer
- David Simmons (rugby league) (born 1984), Australian rugby league player
- David Stagg (born 1983), Australian Rugby League player
- Dave Stephens (javelin thrower) (born 1962), American javelin thrower
- David Stephens, (Born 1991), English Footballer
- David Stockdale, goalkeeper playing for Fulham
- David Suazo, Honduran footballer
- David Sullivan (disambiguation)
- David Taylor (footballer born 1965), Welsh football player and coach
- David Trezeguet, French footballer
- David Tsebe, South African marathon runner
- David Tua, New Zealand heavy weight boxer
- David Tyshler, Soviet saber fencer
- David Villa, Spanish footballer
- David West (basketball), American basketball player
- David Wharton, American butterfly and medley swimmer
- David Wright, American baseball player
Authors
- David Batstone (21st century), American journalist
- David S. Broder, political commentator for The Washington Post
- David Chase, American screenwriter
- David F. Dodge, American novelist
- David Eddings, American fantasy writer
- David Eggers, American writer, editor, and publisher
- David Frum, conservative Canadian-American political writer
- David Gerrold, science fiction novelist who wrote "The Trouble With Tribbles" episode of Star Trek
- David Hume, Scottish philosopher
- David Henry Hwang, American playwright
- Dovid Kaplan, senior lecturer at Ohr Somayach, Jerusalem, popular author and speaker
- David Kroyanker, Israeli architectural historian
- David Lassman, British writer responsible for the 'Rejecting Jane' article about Jane Austen and co-author of The Regency Detective series of novels
- David Le Sage, Australian writer and Christian anti-war activist
- David Mamet, American playwright
- David Mills (1961–2010), American television writer and producer
- David Mitchell, British novelist
- David Rakoff, American essayist
- David Ricardo, British political economist
- David Sedaris, American essayist
- David Shaw (writer) (1943–2005), American journalist for the Los Angeles Times
- David Simon, American author, journalist, and TV producer
- David Shore, Canadian writer and television producer
- David Foster Wallace (1962–2008), American novelist and essayist
Others
- David Brooks (disambiguation)
- David Burroughs Mattingly, digital artist
- David Carnegie (disambiguation)
- David Carson, graphic designer
- David Carter CBE (born 1927), British industrial designer and educator.
- David Charlesworth, English Catholic abbot
- David Dimbleby, British TV commentator and presenter of current affairs and political programmes.
- David Feinstein, rabbi
- David Fincher, film director
- David Frost, (1939–2013), British broadcaster
- David Gest, American TV producer
- David Geeson, British Video Game Developer
- David Wark Griffith, film director
- David Hamilton, British photographer
- David Hayter, screenwriter and voice actor for Solid Snake
- David Horler, father of Natalie Horler
- David H. Jarvis, captain in the United States Revenue Cutter Service
- David Lynch, film director
- David Marshall, goalkeeper playing for Cardiff City F.C.
- David Ramsden, contestant on Big Brother 10 (UK)
- David Rebibo, congregational rabbi and Jewish day school dean
- David Saint-Jacques, Canadian astronaut
- David Sanders (disambiguation)
- David Shaw (disambiguation)
- Dave Stephens (sculptor)
- David Stephens (public servant)
- David Talbot, founder of Salon.com Internet magazine
- David Toska, Norwegian bank robber
- David Vetter (1971–1984), the "Boy in the Bubble"
- David Willis, cartoonist
- David Woodard, American businessman
- David Yonggi Cho, Korean Christian minister
Fictional characters
- David (Animorphs), a character in four of the 54+ Animorphs books.
- David (Sesame Street), a human character on Sesame Street from 1971 to 1989, played by Northern Calloway.
- David Xanatos, on of the main antagonists, turned ally in the animated series, Gargoyles.
- David, a character in the Battle Arena Toshinden fighting game series.
- David Aames, a character in the 2001 film Vanilla Sky
- Dr. David Banner, main character from TV series The Incredible Hulk.
- David Copperfield, title character in the book of the same name by Charles Dickens.
- David Fisher, one of the main characters from the HBO series, Six Feet Under.
- David Freeman, the main character in the movie Flight of the Navigator.
- Davy Jones, legendary pirate portrayed in Pirates of the Caribbean; see also Davy Jones' Locker
- Dave Lister, main character of the British sitcom Red Dwarf
- David Marcus, Captain Kirk's son in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan and Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
- David Platt, character in Coronation Street
- David Tarrant, a senior police chief at New Scotland Yard, London, England, from the ;;Power of Five;; series
- David Telford, a recurring character in Stargate Universe
- David Turner, in Degrassi: The Next Generation
- David the Gnome
- David, real name of Solid Snake, protagonist of several Metal Gear videogames.
- David Rossi a main character in the series Criminal Minds
- David, the main character in the movie A.I. Artificial Intelligence
- David, in the movie Prometheus
- David of Sassoun, Armenian epic hero
- David Nolan (Once Upon a Time), character in abc series, Once Upon a Time (TV series).
Variants
- Afrikaans: Dawid
- Albanian: Davidi, Dauti
- Arabic: modern Arabic spelling: داوود or traditional: داود (Dāwūd, Daawuud, Daafid, Dawud, Dawood, Da'ud, Daúd)
- Armenian
- Azerbaijani: Davud, داوود
- Biblical Greek: Δαυὶδ, Δαβίδ, Δαυΐδ, Δαυείδ, Δαυίδης
- Biblical Hebrew: Dawid
- Bashkir: Дауыт (Dawït)
- Basque: Dabid
- Bosnian: Davud, Dawud, Daud, Daut
- Breton: Dewi
- Bulgarian: Давид, Давидко
- Catalan: David
- Cornish: Daveth
- Croatian: David
- Czech: David, Davídek
- Danish: David
- Dutch: David
- Esperanto: Davido
- Estonian: Taavet, Taavi
- Amharic: Dawit
- Faroese: Dávur, Dávid, Dávið, Dávi
- Filipino: David, Davide
- Finnish: Daavid, Taavetti, Taavi, Taavo
- French: David
- Fula: Dauda, Daouda
- Galician: Davide
- Ge'ez: Dawit
- Georgian: დავით (Davit), დათო (Dato), დათა (Data), დათუჩა (Datucha), დათიკო (Datiko), დათუნა (Datuna)
- German: David
- Greek: Δαβίδ (David)
- Gujarati: ડેવિડ (Ḍēviḍa)
- Hausa: Dauda, Daouda
- Hawaiian: Kawika, Havika, Kāwika
- Hebrew: Hebrew spelling without diacritics: דויד or full diacritics: דָּוִד (David)
- Hindi: डेविड (Ḍēviḍa)
- Hungarian: Dávid
- Icelandic: Davíð
- Indonesian: Daud
- Inuktitut: ᑖᕕᑦ (Taavit)
- Irish: Dáibhídh, Dáibhead, Daithí
- Italian: Davide
- Japanese: デイビッド (Deibiddo), ダビデ (Dabide)
- Kannada: ಡೇವಿಡ್ (Ḍēviḍ)
- Khmer: ដាវីត (Daaviit)
- Korean: 데빗 (Debit), 데이빗 (Deibit), 데이비드 (Deibideu), 다비드 (Dabideu), 다윗 (Dawit)
- Latin: David
- Latvian: Dāvids, Dāvis
- Lithuanian: Dovydas, Deividas
- Malayalam: David, Devassy
- Macedonian: Давид (DeJvid)
- Manado Malay: Davij, Davi, Dav, Daud
- Mandarin Simplified Chinese: 戴维 (Dàiwéi), 大卫 (Dàwèi), 大維 (Dàwéi)
- Mandarin Traditional Chinese: 戴維 (Dàiwéi), 大衛 (Dàwèi), 大維 (Dàwéi)
- Mandinka: Dawda, Dauda, Daouda
- Manx: Davy
- Māori: Rāwiri
- Marathi: दावीद (Dāvīda)
- Medieval English: Daw
- Mi'kmaq: Dabit
- Northern Sami: Dávvet
- Norwegian: David
- Persian: داوود or داود (Davud)
- Polish: Dawid
- Portuguese: Davi (only in Brazil), David (Brazil and Portugal)
- Punjabi: ਦਾਊਦ ਨੂੰ (Dā'ūda nū)
- Romanian: David
- Russian: Давид (Davíd), Давыд (Davýd), Дэйвид (Déjvid)
- Scots: Dauvit, Dauid
- Scottish Gaelic: Dàibheid, Dàibhidh
- Serbian: Давид (David)
- Skolt Sami: Daa´ved
- Slovak: Dávid, David
- Slovenian: David
- Spanish: David
- Swahili: Daudi
- Swedish: David, Dawid
- Syriac: ܕܘܝܕ (Dawid or Da'wood)
- Tamil: தாவீது (Daveedu)
- Telugu: డేవిడ్ (Ḍēviḍ)
- Thai: เดวิด (Dewid)
- Tiberian: Dāwîḏ
- Turkish: Davut, Davud
- Ukrainian: Давид (Davyd), Devid
- Urdu: ڈیوڈ
- Welsh: Dafydd, Dewi, Dai, Dewydd
- Yiddish: Dovid, Dawid
- Yoruba: Dafidi, Dawodu, Dauda.
- Zulu: uDavide
As a surname
David emerges as a surname derived from the given name (patronymic) in the early modern period.
People with the surname
- Gerard David (c. 1455–1523), Dutch renaissance painter
- Ferenc Dávid (1510–1579), founder of the Unitarian Church in Transylvania
- Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825), French neoclassical painter
- Pierre Jean David (1788–1856), called "David d'Angers", French sculptor
- Félicien-César David (1810–1876), French composer
- Ferdinand David (musician) (1810–1873), German violinist and composer
- Leopold David (1878 or 1881–1924), first mayor of Anchorage, Alaska
- Dickie David (1879–1939), Wales national rugby union player
- Hérmine David (1886–1970), French painter
- Johann Nepomuk David (1895–1977), Austrian composer
- Albert David (1902–1945), American naval officer
- Hilario P. Davide, Sr. (1904–2006), Filipino teacher and politician
- Constantin David (1908-1941), Romanian communist activist
- Gyula Dávid (1913–1977), Hungarian composer
- Hal David (1921–2012), American lyricist and songwriter
- F. R. David (born 1947), Tunisian-born French singer
- Larry David (born 1947), American comedian, writer, and actor
- Keith David (born 1956), American actor
- Peter David (born 1956), American writer
- Leonardo David (1960–1985), Italian alpine skier
- Cristian David (born 1967), Romanian politician
- Stuart David (born 1969), Scottish musician and novelist
- Anna David (journalist) (born 1970), American journalist
- Kornél Dávid (born 1971), Hungarian basketball player
- Gary David (born 1978), Filipino professional basketball player
- Craig David (born 1981), English musician
- Jason David (born 1982), NFL football player for the New Orleans Saints
- Anna David (singer) (born 1984), Danish pop and soul music singer
- Colt David (born 1985), American football player
- Elizabeth David (1913–1992), British cookery writer
Fictional characters
- Martin David, the main character in the film The Hunter
- Ziva David, a main character in the series NCIS
See also
References
- ↑ Strong's Concordance H1732
- ↑ "Popular Baby Names". ssa.gov.
- ↑ although Dai was formerly used as a name in its own right prior to the late 15th century, possibly derived from a Welsh word meaning "shining". The name was very popular in Wales, leading to the situation whereby in England, "Taffy" or "Taff"(imitating the Welsh pronunciation of "Dafydd") became used as a pejorative nickname for Welshmen regardless of their actual name.
- ↑ "The Crosslinguistic Study of Language Acquisition". google.com.
- ↑ "Jack and Emma were the most popular first names in Northern Ireland in 2003" (PDF) (Press release). Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. 2 January 2004. Retrieved 14 February 2008.
(see tables "Comparison with 1975" and "Top 20 Names 2000–2003")
- ↑ pokemyname.com