English edit

Noun edit

caressing name (plural caressing names)

  1. (archaic) A name or nickname used to express affection, especially to a child, parent, or other loved one.
    Synonyms: pet name, term of endearment
    • 1834 February, Christian Isobel Johnstone, “The Sabbath Night’s Supper”, in Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine[1], page 9:
      Robin’s Young Chevalier diligently filled the glass of Charles’s Greysteel,—such were their old caressing names for each other []
    • 1853, Elizabeth Gaskell, chapter 3, in Ruth[2], volume 3, London: Chapman and Hall, page 78:
      “Mother,” said he, after a pause, coming nearer [] “mammy darling,” said he, using the caressing name, which he had been trying to drop as not sufficiently manly
    • 1866, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Birds of Prey, Book 3, Chapter 4, in Belgravia, February, 1867, p. 395,[3]
      Miss Halliday consented to call her mother’s husband “Papa,” though the caressing name seemed in a manner to stick in her throat.
    • 1923, Ernest Jones, “The Theory of Symbolism” in Papers on Psycho-Analysis, New York: William Wood, p. 142,[4]
      [] the four ideas that keep recurring in connection with the name ‘punchinello’ are (1) a caressing name for male offspring, equivalent to ‘little man’ []
    • 1949, Dorothy Bussy, chapter 5, in Olivia[5], London: Hogarth Press, published 1950, page 40:
      She would call me by caressing names, she would talk to me about my dear Mamma and my little brothers and sisters []