nookie

Jonathon Green slang at ABECEDARY.NET
Wed Jan 18 13:20:42 UTC 2006


I offer the following for comments.

1868 Boyer diary in ed. Barnes _Naval Surgeon (1963) 16 Oct. <num>102: A
grand ‘John Nugi,’ or, as some call it, a ‘Johnnie Nookee.’ In order for
me to explain said affair, it will be necessary for me to state that a
‘Nugi’ [<i>Nugu</i>, meaning to take off (one’s clothing)] consists of
nothing more ot less than a fine display of human form divine of ye fair
but frail daughters of Japan. [...] Every girl follows a leader, and if
she makes a mistake, why, she forfeits a portion of her clothing. This
little game continues until everyone of the girls is as naked as she was
when she came into the world. By this time the girls are about half full
of saki; the gentlemen drink enough to make them feel their oats. As
soon as the girls are naked, why, so soon do they commence to perform
all manner of tricks, dancing in the most voluptuous manner, placing
themselves in all the different kinds of attitudes that one might
imagine men and women would take whilst having carnal communication with
each other

As things stand the cited first uses of 'nookie' are 1928, for the
person, usu. a woman, seen as a sexual object and 1930 for the act
itself. The etymology is considered to be unknown.

The question is, of course, could this be the root of the 20C term? I
know Jon Lighter has, like me (or more properly my parttner Susie Ford)
read the Boyer diaries. However since this cite doesn't appear in HDAS I
assume he rejected it. I, on the other hand, am very tempted. The
problem on a personal level is that I have no Japanese, nor yet any
knowledge of Japanese culture at the time. The lexicographical problem
is that there does appear to be a suspiciously lengthy gap between the
mid-19C sailors' use of the term in Japan, and it's (re-)emergence in
the late 1920s. However, since we dealing in slang, and sexual slang in
particular, this is hardly insurmountable.

Any thoughts, anyone?

JG

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