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4
votes
Accepted
Is Evelyn pronounced variously based on gender?
From Wikipedia:
The name originally was used as a surname, which derived from Aveline,
a feminine Norman French diminutive of the name Ava.[2] Ava itself is
a hypocoristic Germanic name, of uncertain …
7
votes
4
answers
6k
views
How are diminutives formed in recent English words?
A large variety of suffixes were used to form diminutives in English. The Wikipedia page on diminutives shows these:
-k/-ock/-uck: balk, bollock, bullock, buttock, fetlock, folk, hark, hillock, jerk …
15
votes
4
answers
6k
views
What is the origin of "rat"?
word has not undergone the High German sound shift suggests that the Germanic group is also late (Middle High German ratz , ratze , German regional (chiefly southern) Ratz , Ratze are secondary, perhaps hypocoristic …
7
votes
Accepted
How common are hypocorisms ending with "s" in female names? (Babs, Bess, Becks...)
This is the suffix ‑s, of which the paywalled OED says:
A shortened form of the hypocoristic diminutive suffix ‑sy suffix², added to the same classes of words, as Babs, Toots; ducks (see duck n.¹ 3c), … As for the referenced ‑sy suffix, this one they explain in more detail:
Hypocoristic diminutive suffix added to (i) proper names, as Betsy,
Patsy, Topsy, also in the form ‑cy, as Nancy, (ii) common nouns …
0
votes
Word for changing or shortening or abbreviating a given name
The hypocoristic form of a name is, as mentioned above, a diminutive form of a name (James becomes Jim or Jimmie, Elizabeth becomes Liz, Beth, or Bettie, Robert becomes Bob or Rob or Bobbie...) but can …
1
vote
What is it called when one person calls another something they metaphorically resemble?
I would go with pet-name as the above answers suggest, but if you wanted a single word, you can also use Hypocoristic, which can be both an adjective describing the name ("she liked the hypocristic name … he gave her") or a noun for the name itself ("he would always call her by her hypocristic"):
Hypocoristic
Of the nature of a pet-name; pertaining to the habit of using endearing or euphemistic …
36
votes
Accepted
Is there an explanation for why both "pop" and "pops" are used to mean father (singular)?
According to the OED, the s in pops is:
A shortened form of the hypocoristic dim. suffix -sy, added to the same classes of words, as Babs, Toots, ducks, moms. …
18
votes
Is there an explanation for why both "pop" and "pops" are used to mean father (singular)?
perspectives", by Richard Skala, 2006)
The Oxford English Dictionary entry for pops indicates that it is formed from the clipping pop combined with a suffix -s that it says is
A shortened form of the hypocoristic …
1
vote
What’s the diminutive form of “reindeer”?
If you were to form a "hypocoristic" or "pet name" based on "reindeer", the most likely strategy would be truncation (because of the syllable count restriction mentioned in tchrist's answer) and suffixation …
6
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Australian hypocorism and the origin of "selfie"
According to the "blog.oxforddictionaries.com" the word of the year 2013 was
selfie. It took more than a decade to this neologism to enter the Oxford Dictionary. Its origin in fact dates back at leas …
4
votes
Accepted
Australian hypocorism and the origin of "selfie"
The poster and photographer, Nathan Hope, posted under the hypocoristic nickname Hopey:
That's the earliest one we have written evidence for. … Instead, as cellphone photography became commonplace more than a decade ago, numerous Australians probably thought to apply the hypocoristic –ie to make selfie. …
4
votes
Accepted
Spelling of Auntie vs Aunty?
The hypocoristic feature is absent in recent coinages, however, which are simply informal and sometimes pejorative ( boonies; cabby; groupie; hippy; looie; Okie; preemie; preppy; rookie). …
2
votes
Accepted
Word to describe "-ie" suffix that is not intended as a diminutive
A more general term for these types of uses is hypocoristic. …
10
votes
2
answers
955
views
Nannicock - a young woman, a fool or something else?
Perhaps Nanny, pet-form of the female forenames Anne and Agnes
(see nanny n. with hypocoristic suffix -cock.)
Compare meacock n., and perhaps also pillicock n. …
13
votes
Accepted
Can one ever say for certain a word does not exist?
Words are things people say or write
As Lewis Caroll so famously wrote:
’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogoves,
…