Diminutive of Dorothy, from Greek meaning 'gift of God.'
Dot began life as a diminutive of Dorothy — itself the English form of the Greek *Dorothea*, constructed from *doron* (gift) and *theos* (God), meaning 'gift of God.' The name Dorothy arrived in England in the sixteenth century and quickly generated a warm stable of pet forms: Dolly, Dora, Thea, and Dot among them. By the late Victorian era, Dot had escaped its diminutive origins and stood independently on birth certificates, particularly in working-class British households where short, punchy names were prized.
The most famous Dot of the twentieth century is arguably Dorothy Gale of L. Frank Baum's *The Wizard of Oz* (1900), whose nickname Dot was used in early stage adaptations. Later, British soap opera gave the world Dot Cotton of *EastEnders*, a character so indelibly associated with her name — sharp, resilient, and quietly moral — that she became a cultural archetype.
In Australia, the children's classic *Dot and the Kangaroo* (1899) made the name synonymous with childhood adventure and innocent curiosity. In the contemporary naming landscape, Dot occupies an appealing niche: it reads as vintage without being musty, is bracingly short in an era of elaborate names, and carries an understated confidence. Used standalone, it feels like a deliberate, modern choice — a single syllable that somehow contains centuries.