Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Danny

Meaning — Danny is an English diminutive of Daniel, from the Hebrew Daniyel meaning "God is my judge" — composed of din (judgment) and El (God). As a standalone given name in French and Spanish contexts, Danny represents the adoption of English-language diminutive naming culture that became fashionable in France and Spain in the second half of the 20th century, following American cultural influence through film, music, and television.·French origin·Male·DA-nee

Danny Danny in French or Spanish contexts carries the informal, transatlantic energy of an Anglophone nickname adopted as a given name — projecting approachability, casual warmth, and a certain cultural cosmopolitanism. Characters named Danny in contemporary French fiction often inhabit the suburbs or multicultural urban spaces, suited to stories of youth, street culture, and the mixing of French and global Anglophone influences.

Best genres for Danny

Contemporary FictionComing-of-AgeCrime FictionLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Danny

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

DannyDanielDanDany

Pairs well with

Danny MartinDanny BernardDanny PetitDanny LeroyDanny GarcíaDanny Moreno

Writing a character named Danny?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

Related names


More French names

Claire

Claire is a French feminine given name from the Latin clara meaning "clear, bright, famous". Saint Clare of Assisi (1194–1253), co-founder with Saint Francis of the Poor Clares religious order, gave the name immense prestige in the Catholic world — her name chosen to match her luminous spiritual beauty. In France, Claire has been one of the most enduringly beloved feminine names, combining religious prestige with everyday elegance.

Zacharie

Zacharie is the French masculine form of Zachary/Zacharias, from the Hebrew Zekharyah meaning "God has remembered", composed of zakhar (to remember) and Yah (God). In the Bible, Zechariah is both a minor prophet and the father of John the Baptist, struck dumb by an angel until the birth of his son. Pope Zachary (741–752) and several other saints gave the name ecclesiastical standing in France.

Chantal

Chantal is a French feminine given name traced to the Old Occitan word cantal meaning "stony place" or "rocky land". The name rose to prominence through Sainte Jeanne de Chantal (1572–1641), a French mystic and co-founder of the Order of the Visitation, canonized in 1767. Her partnership with Saint François de Sales made the name a symbol of mystical friendship and spiritual courage in the French Catholic tradition.

Ingrid

Ingrid is a Scandinavian feminine name, from the Old Norse Ingríðr — composed of Ing (a Norse fertility god, ancestor of the Ingvaeones) and fríðr meaning "beautiful, beloved". The name entered French use through Scandinavian royal connections and the global fame of Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman, who starred in French films and became one of cinema's most beloved figures. It is used as a given name in France with a distinctly cosmopolitan, northern European flavor.

Sophie

Sophie is the French form of Sophia, from the Greek sophia meaning "wisdom". In France and across the German-speaking world, Sophie became one of the most beloved feminine names, carried by queens, philosophers' wives, and fictional heroines. Tolstoy's War and Peace and countless French novels feature Sophies as emblems of refined, good-natured intelligence.

Charlotte

Charlotte is the French feminine form of Charles, from the Old French Charlot, itself from the Germanic Karl meaning "free man". It dates to at least the 14th century in France, and spread across Europe through French royal influence — Charlotte of Savoy, Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (Queen of England), and Goethe's Lotte from The Sorrows of Young Werther all bore the name.


Explore more