nannie
See also: Nannie
English
Etymology
From nan (“grannie; nursemaid”) + -ie.
Noun
nannie (plural nannies)
- Alternative form of nanny (female goat)
- 1935, The Southwestern Sheep and Goat Raiser, volume 6, page 77:
- […] one of her lambs herding the kid away from the nannie, while the ewe's other two lambs were nursing the nannie.
- Alternative form of nanny (grandmother or child's nurse)
- 1931, Maternity and Child Welfare, volumes XV–XVI, London: John Bale, Sons & Danielsson, Ltd., →OCLC, page 168, columns 1–2:
- The last sign I am going to mention to-day is a very strong attachment for one particular person. I mean a “Mummie’s boy” or “Nannie’s baby” or “Daddie’s girl.” It is natural for a baby or a toddler to be fondest of those who have fed, bathed and dressed him, played with him (not too much, I hope) and cared for him but there comes a time—the earlier the better—when he wants to try to do things for himself, to feel his feet, and to begin to learn independence.
- 1953 December, Henry Maxwell, “The Folkestone Harbour Branch: Some Evocations”, in Railway Magazine, page 805:
- My nannie was the daughter of a signalman—his box was on the down side of the railway at Smeeth, on the old South Eastern main line—and she fortunately needed no persuasion of the desirability of spending all leisure moments by the trains and steamers.
- 1971, Bertha E. Mahony Miller, The Horn Book Magazine, volume 47, page 588:
- She was also two years older than my gentle uncle, who was a favorite with both my mother and my nannie […]