willy
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English willy, willi, equivalent to will + -y. Cognate with Dutch willig (“obedient, hearsome”), German willig (“willing”), Swedish villig (“willing, agreeable”).
willy (comparative willier or more willy, superlative williest or most willy)
From Middle English wilȝe, from Old English wiliġ (“willow”). More at willow.
willy (plural willies)
willy (third-person singular simple present willies, present participle willying, simple past and past participle willied)
From Middle English wilie, from Old English wiliġe, wileġe (“basket”), from Proto-Germanic *wiligō (“wicker basket”), from Proto-Indo-European *weliko- (“willow-tree”). More at weel, willow.
willy (plural willies)
Originally northern British usage, from the 1960s. Probably the simple use of a proper name as a pet name; compare dick, fanny and peter. Unlikely to be a contraction of Latin membrum virile, male member (that is, the penis), a Latin term used in English in the nineteenth century.
willy (plural willies)
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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
willy (plural willies)
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