Modern invented blend possibly combining Daz- with Azariah, a Hebrew name meaning 'helped by God.'
Dazariah is a striking modern creation built around one of the most recognizable elements in Hebrew theophoric naming: the suffix -iah (יָהּ), a shortened form of the divine name Yahweh. This suffix appears in dozens of biblical names — Azariah ("Yahweh has helped"), Zechariah ("Yahweh has remembered"), Nehemiah ("Yahweh comforts"), Isaiah ("Yahweh is salvation") — giving each name the character of a statement of faith, a declaration about the nature of God embedded in a person's very identity. The -zariah within the name most clearly echoes Azariah, the Hebrew prophet and one of the three young men — alongside Hananiah and Mishael — thrown into the fiery furnace in the Book of Daniel and delivered unharmed.
The Daz- prefix is the name's modern signature, distinguishing it from its biblical cousins and giving it a contemporary energy that balances the ancient weight of -iah. This pattern — taking a venerable Hebrew suffix and pairing it with a newly coined prefix — reflects a lively tradition in African-American naming culture, where the creative formation of new names draws on both biblical reverence and a commitment to individual distinctiveness. Names like Dazariah assert that the sacred is not fixed in old forms alone but can be renewed in each generation.
As a name, Dazariah has a natural grandeur: five syllables that unspool with authority, the Da opening with purpose and the -riah closing with a breath of spiritual resonance. It is a name that announces itself, asking to be remembered.