View Message

Jessie
What do you think of Jessie for a girl? Just Jessie, not as a nickname for something. Would it work? Sometimes I think it's too cutesy but then again Jesse is used as a full name for boys and sounds the same and I never thought that was cutesy.I don't really like Jessica. I like Jessamine and Jessamy but not enough to put them on a birth certificate. So what do you think? Do you know anyone named just Jessie? I only know who is in her early 30s.Oh and do you think many Jessicas go by Jessie? Most I know go by their full name or by Jess. Just wondering because if many Jessicas went by Jessie it would be a common name.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I do know a Jessie. She's 96 years old. Originally from Scotland, she married a Canadian and emigrated shortly after WW2. Very nice woman. Physically frail, but mentally at full capacity.
vote up1
Heh. My son, who will be 6 in a couple weeks, told me the other night that he intends to marry Disney actress Debby Ryan and have a daughter named Jessie Odyssey. I think Jessie is a great nickname, but I wouldn't use it on its own. I don't know anyone named just Jessie or any adult Jessicas who use it as a nickname.
vote up1
I love Jessie as a full girls names much more then on a boy so yeah it would be fine.
vote up1
I don't care for it. It seems kind of low-rent, or hillbilly, to be a full name for a girl. (I also think it's low-rent and hillbilly for a boy when spelled Jessie.)Most Jessicas I knew were equally at home using Jess, Jessie or Jessica. I much prefer Jessica.
vote up1
Hm, it's too nicknamey for my liking. But I wouldn't be repulsed if someone else did it. :) I know one Jessica who goes by Jess and one who goes by Jessica/Jessi.
vote up1
I like Jessie, and I don't like any of the full names either, so I think it works just fine on its own. My brother's name is Jesse, and he has never had any problems with it.I don't know any Jessicas who go by Jessie.
vote up1
I know just one 'just Jessie' - she's deep in her 70s. Jessie Margaret, I think she said.I don't know any Jessicas who go by Jessie. Most of them answer to Jess, though.
vote up1
I think it could work on it's own and maybe even be nicknamed to Jess at times. I prefer Jesse on a boy though to be honest. I don't know any girls who go by the full name Jessie (or boys for that matter). I know a girl who is Laura Jessie May as her first and middle namesI only know 2 Jessica's, one goes by Jessica and one by Jess
vote up1
I never really liked Jessica, but i prefer Jessie. I know someone whose fn is Jessie-May, but she just goes as Jess, personally i wouldn't shorten it to Jess, Jessie is way better :)
vote up1
I think it fits in with naming trends today, just as Maisie and Milly do.
If I was going to use it, I'd decide definitely which meaning I was going with - Jessie as a form of Janet or Jean (as traditionally in Scotland) or as a feminisation of Jesse. In my case, a version of Janet/Jean wins hands down. I like the historical legacy, and the other option seems forced to me.
vote up1
With just Jessie you can't decide on a meaning. It just has two meanings.
vote up1
I've always liked it, in a GP way*. There are a few Victorian Jessies in my extended family tree, and they're all just Jessie - not Jessica, which wasn't really used then. I don't like Jessica much either. I've never met a Jessie, but given the popularity of -ie names atm, it wouldn't be out of place.
*It is sort of a slang term for a wuss in parts of the UK ("ooh, you big jessie"). Not a problem for you though!
vote up1