Davion, pronounced DAY-vee-uhn, is generally interpreted as a contemporary American elaboration of the Hebrew classic David (“beloved”), its -ion ending echoing the phonological patterns that rose to prominence in late-20th-century Black and broader Anglo-American naming traditions; some scholars also note possible convergence with the athletic-inflected Deion or the Latin-sounding Damian, creating a hybrid that feels simultaneously familiar and newly minted. First appearing in federal birth records during the mid-1970s and advancing steadily to a zenith of national rank 399 in 2005, the name has since exhibited a controlled descent—standing at 763 in 2024—yet its multi-decade persistence signals more than a transient fashion, rather a stable micro-culture of parents drawn to its balance of biblical gravitas and aerodynamic modernity. Because Davion retains the semantic aura of “beloved” while shedding David’s ubiquitous footprint, it offers a technical compromise: a name that codes traditional virtue without the statistical commonness that often accompanies it, thereby affording its bearers a distinctive but academically traceable identity in English-speaking contexts.
Davion Mitchell - |
Davion Mintz - |