From the English word for a mischievous fairy or sprite, Pixie is whimsical and folklore-based.
Pixie steps directly out of the fairy lore of England's West Country — Cornwall and Devon specifically — where pixies (also spelled pigsies or piskies) were mischievous supernatural beings believed to inhabit moorlands, stone circles, and ancient ruins. The word's etymology is uncertain; some scholars connect it to Swedish dialect words for small fairy-like creatures, while others root it in the Old Cornish landscape itself. Unlike the gentle Victorian fairy, the pixie of original folklore was a trickster: leading travelers astray, stealing horses for midnight rides, and tangling hair in the night.
As a given name, Pixie is a bold act of whimsy, carrying the full freight of its folkloric heritage. It became associated with a certain bohemian British aesthetic in the twentieth century, worn by artists and free spirits. Australian model and television personality Pixie Geldof — daughter of musician Bob Geldof — brought the name modern visibility, lending it a rock-and-roll aristocratic flair that balanced its elfin playfulness.
Pixie sits firmly in the category of names that make a statement: imaginative, slightly irreverent, impossible to shorten further. It pairs the ancient world of British mythology with a contemporary spirit of individuality. For parents who want a name that will never be confused in a classroom register, Pixie delivers — along with centuries of mischief built right in.