The name Kissy in James Bond
What is the real form of the name "Kissy"? I mean, its obviously a nickname like "Bob" for "Robert"... What's the actual name? anyone knows?
vote up1vote down

Replies

It's just an affectionate nickname, kind of like Honey or Darling. No one is actually named Kissy as far as I know. (Of course, sometimes parents overlook that when naming a kid after a fictional character. Look at the people who have named their daughters Scout - Scout's name in To Kill a Mockingbird is really Jean.)
vote up1vote down

Of course the Bond character's name isn't a nick, but the name Kissy isn't original there either. Maybe the writer thought it was. I always thought Kissy was a variant of Kizzie. Let's see ... where'd I get that idea ... Kissie is listed in my name dictionary (Dunkling & Gosling New Am Dict of FN 1983) as a "variant of Keziah" and under Kizzy it says:Made famous in modern times by Alex Haley's novel Roots. In the book the name is explained by the hero Kunta as "you sit down" or "you stay put" in the Mandinka language. Kunta sees this as meaning that "unlike Bell's previous two babies, this child would never get sold away." But Kizzy, Kizzzie, Kissie, etc. were common slave names and are far more likely to have derived from Keziah. Kissy is a place name in Sierra Leone (where Mandinka happens to be spoken) according to wikipedia, but that could be a coincidence.

This message was edited 12/19/2012, 9:06 AM

vote up1vote down
Why do you think this name has to be a pet form of a longer name like Bob?Ian Fleming's James Bond novels are full of characters with names like Pussy Galore, Octopussy, and Plenty O'Toole, which are chosen for their sexual connotations and are not necessarily based on any other name. I would expect that the first name of the character Kissy Suzuki was created by Ian Fleming from the word "kiss" and was not meant to be a short form of another name at all, but a nickname based on the fact that James Bond (and other men) would like to kiss her.
vote up1vote down
Pussy Galore, Octopussy and Plenty O'Toole are nicknames, codenames or nom de guerres... In the case of Plenty O'Toole the surname can actually be O'Toole since it is a normal surname nonetheless "Plenty O'Toole" can be understood as "Plenty tools" where "tool" can be there as part of the semantic part of the pseudonym, however in Kissy Suzuki there is no such pairing; Kissy and Suzuki aren't a meaningful combination... Mirfak's hypothesis that Kissy is derived from Kesiah (which means cassia) is a slightly superior possibility, yet as an African name it makes no sense in a full-bloodied Japanese woman... I guess rather than asking this among onomastic fans I should ask it among literature analysts with an expertise in Ian Fleming... If there are any...
vote up1vote down
Kesiah / Keziah is Hebrew, not African. It's a Biblical name. I believe the association with Africa comes from the 1970s TV series "Roots".
vote up1vote down
True, my bad... However a hebrew name is still farfetched for a Japanese character with no Jewish ancestry...
vote up1vote down
"Kissy" is not a possible Japanese name (the sound combination does not exist in that language), so the fact that the character is Japanese is apparently irrelevant here. It may very well be just a nickname.
vote up1vote down
Yes Claudia... it doesn't sound Japanese at all... However... could it be an English hypocorism of a Japanese name? although "kiseru" is not a Japanese name ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiseru )it is a Japanese term... Kissy could be a hypocorism for it... Couldn't it?
vote up1vote down
It's certainly possible, but if Kissy is a diminutive of any Japanese word it seems more likely that it would derive from the common word "kisu," a loanword from English "kiss." There are various female Japanese names which begin with Kis-, including Kisa, Kisae, Kisako, Kisaki, Kisara and others. It's possible that a bearer of one of these names might go by Kissy in an English-speaking context.
vote up1vote down
Thanks... I will try finding those names... I guess the list is too long so you didn't gave all those... But it certainly gives a good idea...
vote up1vote down
Did you want an exhaustive list of Japanese Kis- names? This one is about as comprehensive as you'll find. Many of these names are extremely rare; perhaps one-of-a-kind. Kisa
Kisachi
Kisae
Kisai
Kisaka
Kisaki
Kisako
Kisami
Kisana
Kisane
Kisano
Kisara
Kisaragi
Kisari
Kisato
Kisaya
KisayoKise
Kisea
Kisei
Kiseki
Kiseko
Kisera
Kiseri
Kiseto
KisetsuKisoe
KisokoKisu
Kisue
Kisugi
Kisuka
Kisuko
Kisuku
Kisumi
Kisun
Kisuna
Kisuyo
Kisuzu
vote up1vote down
W0w thanks... Mmmm Now I have the mission of finding their etymology... That will be a daunting task but you have already helped me a lot
vote up1vote down
If you like, shoot me an e-mail at csegger@sbcglobal.net, and I'll send you a list of the characters used for these names and a site where you can look up their individual meanings. It's really too long to post here.
vote up1vote down
Thanks for the offer... If you are willing to do that... I gonna do so :D
vote up1vote down