An English word name directly meaning a female deity or divine being.
Goddess stands at the boldest edge of the English-language naming tradition, belonging to a growing category of names drawn directly from nouns that carry aspirational, spiritual, or symbolic weight. The word itself derives from the Old English gydesse, a feminine construction of god — tracing back through Proto-Germanic to the Proto-Indo-European root ghut-, meaning "that which is invoked" or "that which is poured" (as in libation). Its use as a personal name is a distinctly modern act of deliberate elevation.
The practice of naming children with words that express divine aspiration has ancient antecedents — the Greek name Thea means "goddess" and was borne in antiquity — but naming a child the English word Goddess itself is a contemporary phenomenon, most visible in communities that value names as declarations of worth, destiny, and spiritual identity. It participates in a broader tradition of names like King, Prince, Precious, and Majesty that refuse diminutive expectations and instead plant the child's inherent value in their very introduction to the world. Goddess as a name carries obvious audacity, but also a tender parental intention: to remind a daughter from her first breath that she is sacred, powerful, and worthy of reverence.
In literary and pop culture contexts, the archetype of the goddess — from Isis to Athena to Lakshmi — represents wisdom, creative force, and cosmic agency. A child named Goddess inherits all of that symbolic weight, compressed into a single, unforgettable word.