Retro Nicknames

  1. Mettie
    • Mimi
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Mary, Miriam, and others
      • Description:

        Sweet, nicknamey name belonging to the tragic heroines of both La Bohème and Rent. Mimi might feel too slight for many parents to use on the birth certificate, but as a short form, it's one of the cutest of the cute baby names.
    • Minnie
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Wilhelmina
      • Meaning:

        "resolute protection"
      • Description:

        Minnie was wildly popular at the turn of the last century — it was the fifth or sixth most popular name throughout the 1880s — but is completely obscure today. Blame Mickey's girlfriend. Regardless, it's possible that the up and coming trend toward old-fashioned nickname-names — think Maisie, Mamie, Millie — may give Minnie (all on its own, not as a short form of anything) a new moment in the sun. Minnie Driver (born Amelia) has given it some modern celeb cred.
    • Mintie
      • Minty
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Aminta and Araminta, Greek
        • Meaning:

          "defender"
        • Description:

          Minty isn't a fresh word name — it's an old-fashioned nickname for Araminta, the romantic smoosh name coined by playwright William Congreve in 1693.
      • Mittie
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Matilda or Martha
        • Description:

          Mittie is an antiquated nickname, best known as the name of the mother of President Theodore Roosevelt. It may be a short form of the pet name Mitten.
      • Molly
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Mary, Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "bitter"
        • Description:

          Molly is one of the original nickname names, ALWAYS ranking among the US Top 500 girl names since statistics began, in 1880. Molly peaked in 1991 only to rise just as high again in 2011, and though softening retains a good measure of popularity and charm.
      • Nealie
        • Nell
          • Origin:

            English, diminutive of Helen, Eleanor, et al
          • Meaning:

            "bright, shining one"
          • Description:

            Nell, once a nickname for Helen, Ellen, or Eleanor, is a sweet old-fashioned charmer that is fashionably used today in its own right. While Nell is perfectly in tune with contemporary vintage name style, it hasn't taken off the way some of its sisters have and so maintains an air of distinction. Use Nell or Nellie as a short for any name from Eleanor to Penelope or just name her Nell.
        • Nellie
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Helen, Eleanor, et al
          • Description:

            This ready-for-revival nickname name recalls the old Gay Nineties and bicycles-built-for-two era. In the US, Nellie is one of the most popular unique girl names, lying just beneath the Top 1000. About five times as many baby girls are named Nellie in the US today as shorter form Nell.
        • Neppie
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Penelope, Greek
          • Meaning:

            "weaver"
          • Description:

            Bygone nickname for Penelope. Try Penny, Nellie, or Poppy today.
        • Ocie
          • Origin:

            Short form of Ocean, nature name
          • Description:

            Ocie is yet another antiquated ie-ending short form that was popular in the late 1800s and early 1900s and now has almost dropped from sight.
        • Onie
          • Osie
            • Patsy
              • Origin:

                English, diminutive of Patricia
              • Meaning:

                "noble, patrician"
              • Description:

                This sassy, spunky name was used for the mostly Irish jump-roping pigtailed girls of the thirties and forties -- and some Irish and Italian boys as well. Its most noted bearer was iconic country music singer Patsy Cline (born Virginia), and was sighted most recently in the Ab Fab movie. After reaching Number 52 in the late thirties, it dropped off the list completely in 1970--and we're not anticipating a return.
            • Peggy
              • Origin:

                Diminutive of Margaret, Greek
              • Meaning:

                "pearl"
              • Description:

                Just when we had written off Peggy as the eternal perky, pug-nosed prom-queen she projected from the 1920s into the fifties, along came Mad Men, with intriguing mid-century characters with names like Joan and Betty--and Peggy, causing a bit of a re-think. MM's proto-feminist Peggy Olson was followed by Amy Adams's strong Oscar-nominated Peggy Dodd character in The Master.
            • Penny
              • Origin:

                English, diminutive of Penelope
              • Description:

                Like Peggy and Patsy, the kind of zesty moniker young Judy Garland would sport in her early let's-put-on-a-show flicks. It fell out of favor (and the Top 1000) for a while, but has recently rebounded by reentering the charts in 2013. Expect it to continue gaining traction as a result of surprise hit Penelope.
            • Pippa
              • Origin:

                English, diminutive of Philippa
              • Meaning:

                "lover of horses"
              • Description:

                Pippa, a peppy condensation of Philippa that turns it from serious to sprightly, has come into the public eye in a big way via the former Kate Middleton's sister.
            • POLLY
              • Poppy
                • Origin:

                  English from Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "red flower"
                • Description:

                  Poppy, unlike most floral names which are sweet and feminine, has a lot of spunk. Long popular throughout the rest of the English-speaking world, Poppy is finally starting to rise toward the top in the US, where it entered the Top 1000 for the first time in 2016.