Origin of “tootsie” or “tootsy” (foot)












7














I was just sitting thinking I had cold tootsies meaning my toes or feet!
This got me wondering, where on earth does the word tootsie/tootsy come from?



I did Google this and got definitions (apparently a childish name for foot) but no reasoning where it comes from. Are there any more clues out there about the word's etymology?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
    – Karl Knechtel
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:59






  • 3




    Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
    – Callithumpian
    Jan 6 '12 at 3:49












  • @Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
    – RegDwigнt
    Dec 13 '13 at 23:02
















7














I was just sitting thinking I had cold tootsies meaning my toes or feet!
This got me wondering, where on earth does the word tootsie/tootsy come from?



I did Google this and got definitions (apparently a childish name for foot) but no reasoning where it comes from. Are there any more clues out there about the word's etymology?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
    – Karl Knechtel
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:59






  • 3




    Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
    – Callithumpian
    Jan 6 '12 at 3:49












  • @Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
    – RegDwigнt
    Dec 13 '13 at 23:02














7












7








7







I was just sitting thinking I had cold tootsies meaning my toes or feet!
This got me wondering, where on earth does the word tootsie/tootsy come from?



I did Google this and got definitions (apparently a childish name for foot) but no reasoning where it comes from. Are there any more clues out there about the word's etymology?










share|improve this question















I was just sitting thinking I had cold tootsies meaning my toes or feet!
This got me wondering, where on earth does the word tootsie/tootsy come from?



I did Google this and got definitions (apparently a childish name for foot) but no reasoning where it comes from. Are there any more clues out there about the word's etymology?







meaning etymology slang history






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 13 '13 at 18:31









aedia λ

8,50173663




8,50173663










asked Oct 26 '11 at 8:59









Bex

14415




14415








  • 1




    It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
    – Karl Knechtel
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:59






  • 3




    Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
    – Callithumpian
    Jan 6 '12 at 3:49












  • @Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
    – RegDwigнt
    Dec 13 '13 at 23:02














  • 1




    It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
    – Karl Knechtel
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:59






  • 3




    Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
    – Callithumpian
    Jan 6 '12 at 3:49












  • @Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
    – RegDwigнt
    Dec 13 '13 at 23:02








1




1




It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
– Karl Knechtel
Oct 26 '11 at 10:59




It may not be obvious where to search for things like this; try english.stackexchange.com/questions/1482/… for a helpful list of resources.
– Karl Knechtel
Oct 26 '11 at 10:59




3




3




Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
– Callithumpian
Jan 6 '12 at 3:49






Voting to reopen. I found an antedating (1842) of tootsy-pootsies for feet and I bet there's some interesting history.
– Callithumpian
Jan 6 '12 at 3:49














@Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
– RegDwigнt
Dec 13 '13 at 23:02




@Callithumpian: please do share. Thank you.
– RegDwigнt
Dec 13 '13 at 23:02










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















5














Etymonline:




tootsy

also tootsie, 1854, baby-talk substitution for foot. Candy bar Tootsie Roll patent claims use from 1908.




And it sounds like a combination of toe and foot.






share|improve this answer





















  • Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
    – Bex
    Oct 26 '11 at 9:56










  • images.google.com/…
    – Unreason
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:09










  • I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
    – Hugo
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:12






  • 4




    Don't bother. They're gross.
    – user13141
    Oct 26 '11 at 10:27










  • @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
    – Karl Knechtel
    Oct 26 '11 at 11:03



















1














The early instance of tootsy-pootsies that Callithumpian notes in a comment beneath the posted question is evidently from "The Physiology of London Evening Parties," part IV, in Punch, or the London Charivari (January [?] 1842), subsequently included (with minor revisions) in volume 2 of Albert Smith, The Wassail-bowl: A Comic Christmas Sketch-book (1844):




At length all the preparations are completed, and a temporary quiet reigns through the house; but it is like the lull of the elements after a boisterous day in March, before it begins to rain. The last ring has brought the last parcel to the door, which of course ought to have arrived first in the morning; the small children have been rapidly undressed and put to bed with the wild notion that they will stay there, and not walk calmly down stairs some three or four hours afterwards in their night-gowns, with their little naked white tootsy-pootsies (the nursery patois for tiny feet) pattering on the cold floor-cloth: the governesses in families where they are not going to give a party have marched all their young ladies, hoops, and la grace sticks, out of the square, and are thinking about changing their collars for dinner; the last views have dissolved, the diving bell of the Polytechnic Institution has gone down, and the Royal George has been blown up for the last time; the Westminster idlers have disappeared, no one knows where, nor ever will; and the last clang of the milk pails has echoed down the areas; in fact to the majority of the world the labours of the day have concluded, excepting policemen, actors, medical men, waiters, people who give parties, and hair-dressers, who attend by appointment an hour before the time of receiving company, pour coiffer les dames.




The use of tootsy as a familiar word affection seems to have occurred at about the same time. From "Matrimonial Dictionary," in Punch (September 26, 1846):




TOOTSY, MOOTSY, and all words ending in tsy, are terms of great endearment. The exact meaning of them has never been ascertained. They are never heard after thirty.




Indeed Albert Smith, The Struggles and Adventures of Christopher Tadpole at Home and Abroad (1847) has a character call his wife "Tootsy," with this brief explanation:




"Well, I don't quite know, Tootsy,"—it was a relic of their honeymoon, that "Tootsy," which Mrs. Gudge still liked to be called. "I've met 'em before though, I think at Sir F's."




I would be remiss not to cite the entry for tootsies in John Hotten, The Slang Dictionary (1864):




TOOTSIES, feet, those of ladies and children in particular. In married life it is said the husband uses this expression for the first six months, after that he terms them HOOFS.







share|improve this answer





























    0














    Children have great difficulty in pronouncing fricatives such as f, sh, v, etc. They typically simplify the sound to the stop consonant which is pronounced at the same, or a nearby, point of articulation. So, the f becomes t. That is the reson for the nickname Peg for Meg.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    True Wolff is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.


















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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      5














      Etymonline:




      tootsy

      also tootsie, 1854, baby-talk substitution for foot. Candy bar Tootsie Roll patent claims use from 1908.




      And it sounds like a combination of toe and foot.






      share|improve this answer





















      • Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
        – Bex
        Oct 26 '11 at 9:56










      • images.google.com/…
        – Unreason
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:09










      • I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
        – Hugo
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:12






      • 4




        Don't bother. They're gross.
        – user13141
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:27










      • @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
        – Karl Knechtel
        Oct 26 '11 at 11:03
















      5














      Etymonline:




      tootsy

      also tootsie, 1854, baby-talk substitution for foot. Candy bar Tootsie Roll patent claims use from 1908.




      And it sounds like a combination of toe and foot.






      share|improve this answer





















      • Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
        – Bex
        Oct 26 '11 at 9:56










      • images.google.com/…
        – Unreason
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:09










      • I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
        – Hugo
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:12






      • 4




        Don't bother. They're gross.
        – user13141
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:27










      • @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
        – Karl Knechtel
        Oct 26 '11 at 11:03














      5












      5








      5






      Etymonline:




      tootsy

      also tootsie, 1854, baby-talk substitution for foot. Candy bar Tootsie Roll patent claims use from 1908.




      And it sounds like a combination of toe and foot.






      share|improve this answer












      Etymonline:




      tootsy

      also tootsie, 1854, baby-talk substitution for foot. Candy bar Tootsie Roll patent claims use from 1908.




      And it sounds like a combination of toe and foot.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Oct 26 '11 at 9:10









      Hugo

      57.9k12167267




      57.9k12167267












      • Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
        – Bex
        Oct 26 '11 at 9:56










      • images.google.com/…
        – Unreason
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:09










      • I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
        – Hugo
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:12






      • 4




        Don't bother. They're gross.
        – user13141
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:27










      • @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
        – Karl Knechtel
        Oct 26 '11 at 11:03


















      • Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
        – Bex
        Oct 26 '11 at 9:56










      • images.google.com/…
        – Unreason
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:09










      • I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
        – Hugo
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:12






      • 4




        Don't bother. They're gross.
        – user13141
        Oct 26 '11 at 10:27










      • @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
        – Karl Knechtel
        Oct 26 '11 at 11:03
















      Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
      – Bex
      Oct 26 '11 at 9:56




      Sounds about right although was hoping for something more interesting? No idea what a tootsie roll is though (I'm in the uk)
      – Bex
      Oct 26 '11 at 9:56












      images.google.com/…
      – Unreason
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:09




      images.google.com/…
      – Unreason
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:09












      I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
      – Hugo
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:12




      I'm from the UK and don't know what Tootsie Roll is either, but candy bar means it's a kind of sweet, manufactured since 1896. Check Wikipedia or Google for more :)
      – Hugo
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:12




      4




      4




      Don't bother. They're gross.
      – user13141
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:27




      Don't bother. They're gross.
      – user13141
      Oct 26 '11 at 10:27












      @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
      – Karl Knechtel
      Oct 26 '11 at 11:03




      @onomatomaniak de gustibus non disputandum est... I used to be quite fond of them. They give your jaw a real workout too :)
      – Karl Knechtel
      Oct 26 '11 at 11:03













      1














      The early instance of tootsy-pootsies that Callithumpian notes in a comment beneath the posted question is evidently from "The Physiology of London Evening Parties," part IV, in Punch, or the London Charivari (January [?] 1842), subsequently included (with minor revisions) in volume 2 of Albert Smith, The Wassail-bowl: A Comic Christmas Sketch-book (1844):




      At length all the preparations are completed, and a temporary quiet reigns through the house; but it is like the lull of the elements after a boisterous day in March, before it begins to rain. The last ring has brought the last parcel to the door, which of course ought to have arrived first in the morning; the small children have been rapidly undressed and put to bed with the wild notion that they will stay there, and not walk calmly down stairs some three or four hours afterwards in their night-gowns, with their little naked white tootsy-pootsies (the nursery patois for tiny feet) pattering on the cold floor-cloth: the governesses in families where they are not going to give a party have marched all their young ladies, hoops, and la grace sticks, out of the square, and are thinking about changing their collars for dinner; the last views have dissolved, the diving bell of the Polytechnic Institution has gone down, and the Royal George has been blown up for the last time; the Westminster idlers have disappeared, no one knows where, nor ever will; and the last clang of the milk pails has echoed down the areas; in fact to the majority of the world the labours of the day have concluded, excepting policemen, actors, medical men, waiters, people who give parties, and hair-dressers, who attend by appointment an hour before the time of receiving company, pour coiffer les dames.




      The use of tootsy as a familiar word affection seems to have occurred at about the same time. From "Matrimonial Dictionary," in Punch (September 26, 1846):




      TOOTSY, MOOTSY, and all words ending in tsy, are terms of great endearment. The exact meaning of them has never been ascertained. They are never heard after thirty.




      Indeed Albert Smith, The Struggles and Adventures of Christopher Tadpole at Home and Abroad (1847) has a character call his wife "Tootsy," with this brief explanation:




      "Well, I don't quite know, Tootsy,"—it was a relic of their honeymoon, that "Tootsy," which Mrs. Gudge still liked to be called. "I've met 'em before though, I think at Sir F's."




      I would be remiss not to cite the entry for tootsies in John Hotten, The Slang Dictionary (1864):




      TOOTSIES, feet, those of ladies and children in particular. In married life it is said the husband uses this expression for the first six months, after that he terms them HOOFS.







      share|improve this answer


























        1














        The early instance of tootsy-pootsies that Callithumpian notes in a comment beneath the posted question is evidently from "The Physiology of London Evening Parties," part IV, in Punch, or the London Charivari (January [?] 1842), subsequently included (with minor revisions) in volume 2 of Albert Smith, The Wassail-bowl: A Comic Christmas Sketch-book (1844):




        At length all the preparations are completed, and a temporary quiet reigns through the house; but it is like the lull of the elements after a boisterous day in March, before it begins to rain. The last ring has brought the last parcel to the door, which of course ought to have arrived first in the morning; the small children have been rapidly undressed and put to bed with the wild notion that they will stay there, and not walk calmly down stairs some three or four hours afterwards in their night-gowns, with their little naked white tootsy-pootsies (the nursery patois for tiny feet) pattering on the cold floor-cloth: the governesses in families where they are not going to give a party have marched all their young ladies, hoops, and la grace sticks, out of the square, and are thinking about changing their collars for dinner; the last views have dissolved, the diving bell of the Polytechnic Institution has gone down, and the Royal George has been blown up for the last time; the Westminster idlers have disappeared, no one knows where, nor ever will; and the last clang of the milk pails has echoed down the areas; in fact to the majority of the world the labours of the day have concluded, excepting policemen, actors, medical men, waiters, people who give parties, and hair-dressers, who attend by appointment an hour before the time of receiving company, pour coiffer les dames.




        The use of tootsy as a familiar word affection seems to have occurred at about the same time. From "Matrimonial Dictionary," in Punch (September 26, 1846):




        TOOTSY, MOOTSY, and all words ending in tsy, are terms of great endearment. The exact meaning of them has never been ascertained. They are never heard after thirty.




        Indeed Albert Smith, The Struggles and Adventures of Christopher Tadpole at Home and Abroad (1847) has a character call his wife "Tootsy," with this brief explanation:




        "Well, I don't quite know, Tootsy,"—it was a relic of their honeymoon, that "Tootsy," which Mrs. Gudge still liked to be called. "I've met 'em before though, I think at Sir F's."




        I would be remiss not to cite the entry for tootsies in John Hotten, The Slang Dictionary (1864):




        TOOTSIES, feet, those of ladies and children in particular. In married life it is said the husband uses this expression for the first six months, after that he terms them HOOFS.







        share|improve this answer
























          1












          1








          1






          The early instance of tootsy-pootsies that Callithumpian notes in a comment beneath the posted question is evidently from "The Physiology of London Evening Parties," part IV, in Punch, or the London Charivari (January [?] 1842), subsequently included (with minor revisions) in volume 2 of Albert Smith, The Wassail-bowl: A Comic Christmas Sketch-book (1844):




          At length all the preparations are completed, and a temporary quiet reigns through the house; but it is like the lull of the elements after a boisterous day in March, before it begins to rain. The last ring has brought the last parcel to the door, which of course ought to have arrived first in the morning; the small children have been rapidly undressed and put to bed with the wild notion that they will stay there, and not walk calmly down stairs some three or four hours afterwards in their night-gowns, with their little naked white tootsy-pootsies (the nursery patois for tiny feet) pattering on the cold floor-cloth: the governesses in families where they are not going to give a party have marched all their young ladies, hoops, and la grace sticks, out of the square, and are thinking about changing their collars for dinner; the last views have dissolved, the diving bell of the Polytechnic Institution has gone down, and the Royal George has been blown up for the last time; the Westminster idlers have disappeared, no one knows where, nor ever will; and the last clang of the milk pails has echoed down the areas; in fact to the majority of the world the labours of the day have concluded, excepting policemen, actors, medical men, waiters, people who give parties, and hair-dressers, who attend by appointment an hour before the time of receiving company, pour coiffer les dames.




          The use of tootsy as a familiar word affection seems to have occurred at about the same time. From "Matrimonial Dictionary," in Punch (September 26, 1846):




          TOOTSY, MOOTSY, and all words ending in tsy, are terms of great endearment. The exact meaning of them has never been ascertained. They are never heard after thirty.




          Indeed Albert Smith, The Struggles and Adventures of Christopher Tadpole at Home and Abroad (1847) has a character call his wife "Tootsy," with this brief explanation:




          "Well, I don't quite know, Tootsy,"—it was a relic of their honeymoon, that "Tootsy," which Mrs. Gudge still liked to be called. "I've met 'em before though, I think at Sir F's."




          I would be remiss not to cite the entry for tootsies in John Hotten, The Slang Dictionary (1864):




          TOOTSIES, feet, those of ladies and children in particular. In married life it is said the husband uses this expression for the first six months, after that he terms them HOOFS.







          share|improve this answer












          The early instance of tootsy-pootsies that Callithumpian notes in a comment beneath the posted question is evidently from "The Physiology of London Evening Parties," part IV, in Punch, or the London Charivari (January [?] 1842), subsequently included (with minor revisions) in volume 2 of Albert Smith, The Wassail-bowl: A Comic Christmas Sketch-book (1844):




          At length all the preparations are completed, and a temporary quiet reigns through the house; but it is like the lull of the elements after a boisterous day in March, before it begins to rain. The last ring has brought the last parcel to the door, which of course ought to have arrived first in the morning; the small children have been rapidly undressed and put to bed with the wild notion that they will stay there, and not walk calmly down stairs some three or four hours afterwards in their night-gowns, with their little naked white tootsy-pootsies (the nursery patois for tiny feet) pattering on the cold floor-cloth: the governesses in families where they are not going to give a party have marched all their young ladies, hoops, and la grace sticks, out of the square, and are thinking about changing their collars for dinner; the last views have dissolved, the diving bell of the Polytechnic Institution has gone down, and the Royal George has been blown up for the last time; the Westminster idlers have disappeared, no one knows where, nor ever will; and the last clang of the milk pails has echoed down the areas; in fact to the majority of the world the labours of the day have concluded, excepting policemen, actors, medical men, waiters, people who give parties, and hair-dressers, who attend by appointment an hour before the time of receiving company, pour coiffer les dames.




          The use of tootsy as a familiar word affection seems to have occurred at about the same time. From "Matrimonial Dictionary," in Punch (September 26, 1846):




          TOOTSY, MOOTSY, and all words ending in tsy, are terms of great endearment. The exact meaning of them has never been ascertained. They are never heard after thirty.




          Indeed Albert Smith, The Struggles and Adventures of Christopher Tadpole at Home and Abroad (1847) has a character call his wife "Tootsy," with this brief explanation:




          "Well, I don't quite know, Tootsy,"—it was a relic of their honeymoon, that "Tootsy," which Mrs. Gudge still liked to be called. "I've met 'em before though, I think at Sir F's."




          I would be remiss not to cite the entry for tootsies in John Hotten, The Slang Dictionary (1864):




          TOOTSIES, feet, those of ladies and children in particular. In married life it is said the husband uses this expression for the first six months, after that he terms them HOOFS.








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          Sven Yargs

          111k18236494




          111k18236494























              0














              Children have great difficulty in pronouncing fricatives such as f, sh, v, etc. They typically simplify the sound to the stop consonant which is pronounced at the same, or a nearby, point of articulation. So, the f becomes t. That is the reson for the nickname Peg for Meg.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              True Wolff is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.























                0














                Children have great difficulty in pronouncing fricatives such as f, sh, v, etc. They typically simplify the sound to the stop consonant which is pronounced at the same, or a nearby, point of articulation. So, the f becomes t. That is the reson for the nickname Peg for Meg.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                True Wolff is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                  0












                  0








                  0






                  Children have great difficulty in pronouncing fricatives such as f, sh, v, etc. They typically simplify the sound to the stop consonant which is pronounced at the same, or a nearby, point of articulation. So, the f becomes t. That is the reson for the nickname Peg for Meg.






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                  Children have great difficulty in pronouncing fricatives such as f, sh, v, etc. They typically simplify the sound to the stop consonant which is pronounced at the same, or a nearby, point of articulation. So, the f becomes t. That is the reson for the nickname Peg for Meg.







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                  True Wolff is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                  answered 4 hours ago









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