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Origin and history of thingy

thingy(n.)

1888, "a little thing," from thing (n.) + -y (3). By 1930s as a weakened word for something the speaker is unable or unwilling to specify (compare thingamajig).

Entries linking to thingy

Middle English thing, from Old English þing, þingc "meeting, assembly, council, discussion," also "action, deed to be done." In late Old English, "concrete inanimate object; that which exists by itself; entity, being, creature;" also "event."

The sense evolution probably is from the notion of the "matter" or subject of deliberation in an assembly. Compare French chose, Spanish cosa "thing," from Latin causa "judicial process, lawsuit, case" (see cause (n.)); Latin res "affair, thing," also "case at law, cause."

It is reconstructed to be from Proto-Germanic *thinga- "assembly" (source also of Old Frisian thing "assembly, council, suit, matter, thing," Middle Dutch dinc "court-day, suit, plea, concern, affair, thing," Dutch ding "thing," Old High German ding "public assembly for judgment and business, lawsuit," German Ding "affair, matter, thing," Old Norse þing "public assembly").

The Germanic word is perhaps (Watkins, Boutkan) literally "appointed time," from a PIE *tenk- (1), from root *ten- "stretch," perhaps on notion of "stretch of time for a meeting or assembly."

The sense of "meeting, assembly" disappeared by early Middle English but is preserved in second element of hustings and in Icelandic, as in Althing, the nation's general assembly.

In reference to a living creature or person by early 12c., often affectionately or pityingly (young thing is from c. 1200). Thing has been used colloquially since c. 1600 to indicate what inanimate object the speaker can't name at the moment, often with meaningless elaborating suffixes (see thingamajig).

Related: Things (c. 1300 as "personal possessions"). Adjective thingal (1857) is rarely used. The thing "what's stylish or fashionable" is recorded from 1762. The phrase do your thing "follow your particular predilection," though associated since 1960s with hippie-speak, is attested from 1841 (Emerson).

also thingumajig, 1824, an arbitrary extension of thing (n.), used in reference to what the speaker is unable or unwilling to name or specify. Thing (n.) itself was used from 12c. as a generic or meaningless word in place of another or unknown word.

Compare in similar sense kickumbob (1620s); thingum (1680s), thingum-thangum (1670s), thingumbob (1751), thingummy (1796); also sometimes thingamy, thingummarie, thing-a-merry; also jigamaree (1824); such-a-thing (1756). Goldsmith has whangam for an imaginary animal.

diminutive suffix used in forming in pet proper names (Christy, Sandy, Jemmy), attested by c. 1400 in Scottish (as -ie). Perhaps it is a merging of the common adjective ending -y (2) with old fem. suffixes in -ie. It might have been reinforced by Dutch -je in similar use.

According to OED (1989) it became frequent in English 15c.-16c.

The use with common nouns, childish names of animals (Jenny wren), etc., also seems to have begun in Scottish (laddie is by 1540s) and become popular in English from late 18c. via Burns (timrous beastie). But the formation perhaps appears earlier in baby and puppy, and compare hobby in hobby-horse. Granny, dearie, and sweetie all are 17c. and early 18c.

In general use with names of girls (Kitty, Jenny), where it coincides with names such as Mary, Lucy, Lily, where it is not a diminutive. The extension to surnames seems to be from c. 1940.

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