Does anybody know what Nunu is short for?
So I had a friend a loooong time ago who used to call her little sister "Nunu" (stylised wither Nunu; Nuu Nuu; Nu Nu or Nu-Nu I'm not sure which). It was short for something but I don't know what it is.Looking on Facebook, there's actually a lot of results with "Nunu / Nu Nu / Nu-Nu" but I'm sure half the accounts are fake (profile pics as naked as you can be without being banned) and the other half appear to be foreign (mostly Asian) or at least a race that isn't White British. My friend was White British and I'm sure the name was not of Asian decent (I could be wrong though, I'll admit)Does anybody have any ideas?
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Could her name have been Nuala or Fionnuala/ Finnuala?
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Hey after spending time mulling that name over because it struck me as familiar... I've decided that it might actually be the correct name I've been looking for. I don't know if it was Fionnuala, Finnuala or even an alternate name like Finnula, but I do recognise the name, as well as Nuala. Recognising both might be the answer to why I thought it might begin with an N but also might not and instead have a Nu/Noo sound in the name. It might have been Finnula to make Nula to make NunuThank you very much!Also thanks to everybody who's helped in solving this mystery for me!
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Did your friend have any South African connections? Or even a long-ago South African neighbour? This extract may help:nunu, noun
/ˈnunuː/
Forms:
Also noonoo.Origin:
Zulu inunu (plural izinunu) horrible object or animal; monster; bogy. colloquial
Especially in KwaZulu-Natal:
1. rare. A term of endearment (particularly to a child); a nickname.
c1948 H. Tracey Lalela Zulu 39 Nunu, my darling. I am troubled and know not what to do...My heart is so disturbed by you, Nunu.
2. An insect: gogga sense 1. Also figurative.
1970 A.K. Leys Informant, DurbanThe children gathered round to inspect the nu-nu (insect or grub).
1993 Weekend Post 25 Sept. 4If you also wonder what that noonoo, long-legged beastie or simple birdcall is, the museum is the place to be. Wednesday sees the creepy-crawlies feature in a talk on ‘Goggas and NooNoos, Long-leggedy Beasties and Things that Go Bump in the Night’.This is from the Dictionary of South African English, a scholarly and reputable publication. A picture on facebook about four years ago, of a young mother and her toddler, got lots of happy comments including "Oh, the little nunu!" They are white South Africans, and judging from the names of the other posters, so are most of their friends. I am familiar with both meanings given in DSAE and have heard them used, never in a bad way at all! In spite of the insect link! If it isn't a term of affection for a human child, it's a way of referring to an insect etc that one doesn't know the name of; a bit like 'creepy-crawly'.
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Oh that would explain the amount of African girl results I got on Facebook. I'm not aware of any South African ancestry or family friends/neighbours, but I suppose that's possible. They had an Irish surname though (O'Brien or O'Briain etc), but that does not mean there's no South African ancestry on either side or outside influences Originally posting this I was certain her name began with an N (I think a 3 syllable name, decent length), but I've called that into question as possibly being a name with another beginning letter, but with a distinctive Nu/Noo sound somewhere in itThank you for that very informative reply, it might be the real answer for the unusual nickname, or at least, partially
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Nusia, Hanuzia
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Actually about Hanuzia... I don't think that's the name, but it's entirely possible that the name doesn't actually begin with N. I might very well have been looking in the wrong place. I thought I remembered very well that it was a name with an N sound in the beginning, but this was so very long ago, I might have imagined that just because of the nickname
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Could also be a nickname for Noelle, Noa, or Hannah (Seems kinda weird, but It could be a result of one of them pronouncing it wrong, with a u sound instead of an a sound.)
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This sounds like a child's first name for their sibling, and could mean anything (even "new" sister)
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That's certainly possible for many uses of Nunu, however I distinctly remember it was short for a name beginning with N
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