Dixie

#78 in Oklahoma

Meaning of Dixie

Dixie races into the room like a brass band con salsa, her syllables snapping—DIKS-ee—and the party begins. The name was born where French explorers traded “dix” (ten) for banknotes and where magnolias perfume the humid air of the old American South, so she carries both a dash of Parisian chic and a porch-swing drawl. Storytellers picture her in a sundress, laughing over iced sweet tea, yet she can just as easily be seen dancing a quick merengue at sunset—Southern charm shaken with Latin spice. Musically minded parents hear echoes of “Dixieland” jazz, all trumpets and tumbaos, while history buffs smile at her century-long cameo on U.S. baby charts, dipping low in the ’80s, climbing again today, always refusing to disappear. Short, sunny, and cheeky, Dixie feels like a nickname you never outgrow, the kind that calls you out to play before dinner and still signs your emails at forty.

Pronunciation

American English

  • Pronunced as DIKS-ee (/ˈdɪks.i/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Dixie

Notable People Named Dixie

Dixie Dean -
Dixie Browning -
Dixie D'Amelio -
Dixie Kiefer -
Dixie Haygood -
Dixie Evans -
Dixie Union -
Dixie Longate -
Dixie B. White -
Carmen Elena Vasquez
Curated byCarmen Elena Vasquez

Assistant Editor