View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Facts] Lucy = English form of Lucia
Oxford's A Dictionary of First Names says Lucy derives from the (Old) French Lucie (http://snipurl.com/n9q6).EDIT: Hm, upon re-reading this, my implied point doesn't seem to be very obvious...I meant to imply that, if you're using Lucia just to get to Lucy in the belief that Lucy's a nn (I've seen it happen before), then that's etymologically and historically unwarranted.Of course, you can still use Lucy as a nn for Lucia. Personally I find it rather pointless, but to each his/her own.

Miranda
Image hosting by PhotobucketProud adopter of 15 punctuation marks; see my profile for their names.

This message was edited 3/7/2006, 12:17 AM

vote up1vote down

Replies

Perhaps we're both having an incoherent day!Using Lucy as a nickname for Lucia may be pointless, but it happens. Ours not to reason why; ours but to be cameras. Also VCRs, DVDs, tape recorders, mobile phones ... (drops from exhaustion)
vote up1vote down