If you translate word for word, use Dandan.
Delia, Della, Diana and Diane can choose according to the habits of the British.
Extended data
For a long time, the British had only a first name and no last name. It was not until the16th century that the use of surnames became widely popular. According to experts' estimation, there are as many as 6.5438+0.5 million surnames in English-speaking countries. Professor Zhou Haizhong, a famous scholar in China, pointed out in the article "A Study of English Names" published in 1992 that there are about 3,000 common English surnames.
The top ten are Smith, Jones, Williams, Brown, Davis, Johnson, Anderson, Taylor, Thomas and Evans. Its population accounts for about half of the English population.
According to a recent survey, the top ten British surnames are still in the same order. ? [1] The etymology of English surnames is:
1. Borrow Christian names directly, such as Clinton.
2. Add affixes to Christian names to express blood relationship, such as suffixes -s, -son,-ing; Prefixes M'-, Mc-, Mac-, Fitz-, etc. Both mean the son or descendant of so-and-so
3. Attach identity affixes before Christian names, such as St.-, De-, Du=, La-, Le-.
4. Reflect place names, landforms or environmental features, such as streams and mountains.
5. Reflect identity or occupation, such as Carter and Smith.
6. Reflect personal characteristics, such as: black, Longfellow.
7. Borrow animal and plant names, such as birds and rice.
8. From the combination of two surnames, such as Edward Burne-Jones.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-English name