A creative spelling of Daisy, the English flower name from Old English day's eye.
Daizie is a spirited phonetic spelling of Daisy, a name that traces back to the Old English *dægesēage* — literally "day's eye" — the folk name for the common daisy flower, whose white petals open each morning and fold at dusk like the iris of a watchful eye. The name entered the English personal naming tradition in the nineteenth century as part of a romantic Victorian enthusiasm for flower names: Violet, Rose, Lily, and Daisy bloomed together as given names during the same decades that botanically illustrated gift books and cottage garden poetry were at their peak. Daisy carries a gallery of famous bearers.
Daisy Buchanan in F. Scott Fitzgerald's *The Great Gatsby* lent the name a certain gilded, elusive glamour — beautiful, carelessly luminous, and ultimately unreachable. Daisy Duck brought it into the realm of warm, comedic affection.
The real-life Daisy Bates, American civil rights activist, and Daisy Ridley, who played Rey in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, have given the name a more purposeful contemporary resonance. The spelling Daizie is a modern creative variant that gives the classic name a fresh visual personality without altering its sound. The substitution of *-zie* for the conventional *-sy* draws on a broader contemporary tendency to individualize familiar names through orthographic reinvention — a way of saying "this is Daisy, but she's distinctly her own." It suggests warmth and a light nonconformity, a name that is recognizable and rooted but wears its heritage loosely.