Here is the link to today's column:
https://omaha.com/life-entertainment/local/cleveland-evans-jodie-jody-jodi-no-matter-the-spelling-its-origin-was-as-a-nickname/article_fbb13d82-8405-11ee-8414-97501fcdebb3.html
The most common explanation for
Jodie and
Jody as a female name, found on this site and other places, is that it was "probably" a form of
Judy or
Judith. (There are also some sites that speculate that male
Jody was from
Jude, though this site does, I think correctly, derive that from
Joseph.)
I do not think
Jodie and
Jody as female names originally came from
Judy. So far every 19th century example of its use as a nickname that I can trace down in USA census records is from
Josephine or
Joanna. I think that someone years ago made a guess that
Jody came from
Judy because they thought you had to have a "d" in the base name in order to explain the "d" in the pet form. I do not think that's correct -- I think the "d" probably comes from some small children just learning to talk finding it easier to say "
Jody" than "
Joey". We know that
Dodie comes from
Dorothy, and I have found examples in the census of Flodie and Flody used as nicknames for
Florence,
Flora, or Florella.
I have no doubt that there probably are some women born in the last half of the 20th century as Judiths or Judys who are called
Jody. Certainly there would have been a time in the 1970s and 1980s when
Jody and
Jodie would have sounded much newer and "cooler" than
Judy and so some Judiths may have seen calling themselves
Jody as an "upgrade" of their nickname. But I think the evidence is overwhelming that the original creation of
Jody and
Jodie was from
Josephine and
Joanna for girls, and
Joseph for boys.
This message was edited 11/19/2023, 10:32 AM