Word like “sirsee” for an unexpected, usually small, gift?
Throughout our marriage, my wife would occasionally come in from shopping and hand me a bag containing an unexpected gift...anything from a small bag of candy to a shirt.
When I'd ask why she got it for me, the word she would use was pronounced "sir'-see". I've tried a variety of spellings, but cannot find a definition that fits those gifts.
Does anyone know what word she's using?
nouns
add a comment |
Throughout our marriage, my wife would occasionally come in from shopping and hand me a bag containing an unexpected gift...anything from a small bag of candy to a shirt.
When I'd ask why she got it for me, the word she would use was pronounced "sir'-see". I've tried a variety of spellings, but cannot find a definition that fits those gifts.
Does anyone know what word she's using?
nouns
possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
4
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago
add a comment |
Throughout our marriage, my wife would occasionally come in from shopping and hand me a bag containing an unexpected gift...anything from a small bag of candy to a shirt.
When I'd ask why she got it for me, the word she would use was pronounced "sir'-see". I've tried a variety of spellings, but cannot find a definition that fits those gifts.
Does anyone know what word she's using?
nouns
Throughout our marriage, my wife would occasionally come in from shopping and hand me a bag containing an unexpected gift...anything from a small bag of candy to a shirt.
When I'd ask why she got it for me, the word she would use was pronounced "sir'-see". I've tried a variety of spellings, but cannot find a definition that fits those gifts.
Does anyone know what word she's using?
nouns
nouns
edited Feb 28 '15 at 15:35
Dan Bron
26.1k1286122
26.1k1286122
asked Feb 28 '15 at 13:31
RoyRoy
101114
101114
possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
4
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago
add a comment |
possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
4
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago
possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
4
4
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
This appears to be slang, concentrated mostly in the Southern US. It is widely reported there, particularly in the Carolinas and Georgia, and its definition is just as you have it.
For example, from the blog The Room Mom:
What is a Sirsee?
Spelling variations: circe, circi, surcy, surcee
Definition (n): word used in the South to mean a small, thoughtful gift, unexpected gift, just because.
Because the word is mostly used in informal, oral, contexts, there's not a lot of literary history or evidence, so its orthography is not standardized, and its origins are murky and uncertain.
So, of course, the Internet abounds with speculation. Here's some of the more credible speculation, from the Word Detective:
Do you know where the word “sercy“, “surcy“, “cerci” or “searcy” comes from? Do you have a plausible theory? Do you use it in conversation?
Word Detective posits:
I posed the question to the American Dialect Society mailing list, and received the following reply from Joan Hall, Associate Editor of DARE (Dictionary of American Regional English):
“The Dictionary of American Regional English files have anecdotal evidence for the term “sirsee”¹ (variously spelled “circe,” “circi,” “surcy”) from NC, SC, GA, and PA, as well as two reports from Buffalo, NY and Oklahoma, where the speakers were said to come from “someplace else.”
“All evidence is oral, so the spellings are speakers’ attempts to represent the pronunciation. The etymology is uncertain, but one plausible source is the Scots verb “sussie,” meaning “to take trouble, to care, to bother oneself.” This probably came to Scotland from the French “souci,” meaning “care, trouble.” The term seems to be especially well known in Columbia, SC, where it is strongly associated with a women’s college. Michael Montgomery of the English Department of the University of SC has reported its use there.”
Furthermore, as @Frank pointed out in the comments, a couple of Southern businesses, Surcees.com, a Southern florist, and Charleston Surcees, a caterer, have embedded the word surcee (so spelled) in their names, and they echo the potential etymology based in Scottish and Irish loanwords:
Surcee is a word, used in the South, that is believed to have its origins in the Scotch and Irish who settled in the region. The Scottish word for "surprise" is pronounced much like "surcee" and could be a phonetic form passed down from generation to generation. Another possible origin for the word is from the Irish term "sussie" which means to care.
I happened to be in Charleston the other week, and passed by Charleston Surcees, so I took a couple of pictures of the word used in the wild:
And one of a collection of various surcees, laid out beneath their definition:
All sources emphasize the word is uniquely Southern.
¹ As indicated, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) does indeed have a headword for "sirsee", but unfortunately one needs a subscription to access its definition and details.
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
|
show 3 more comments
My mother (1919-1960) was from Yemassee, South Carolina, and used the term to describe a thoughtful, unexpected, unnecessary, & inexpensive gift thanking someone for helping resolve a pesky, annoying problem: a figurative pebble in one's shoe. The usual measure was that the help received was absolutely necessary, but relatively and objectively minor, particularly when compared to the problem itself. Like many, I have never seen the term in print and assumed it was a lower-case variation of the mythological Greek sorceress Circe. There's no connection with Circe, but I like the spelling. I suppose "lagniappe" or "cumshaw" comes the closest to the word's meaning.
add a comment |
I had a French girl friend (exchange student) in college that used a word that sounded like "cerci" for a little present or small thoughtful gift. I seem to remember the word was a colloquial french contraction of the phase "cadeau de coeur" which means gift from the heart. It was informal french, usually used only in a family or with a loved one.
add a comment |
I grew up south of New Orleans and often gave or received a sussie - a small thoughtful gift. It was a common expression along the MS and LA gulf coast line. I only heard it pronounced. I always assumed it was spelled sussie (sus see). I have never heard it pronounced sursee. I am sure dialect plays a role in the pronunciation.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This appears to be slang, concentrated mostly in the Southern US. It is widely reported there, particularly in the Carolinas and Georgia, and its definition is just as you have it.
For example, from the blog The Room Mom:
What is a Sirsee?
Spelling variations: circe, circi, surcy, surcee
Definition (n): word used in the South to mean a small, thoughtful gift, unexpected gift, just because.
Because the word is mostly used in informal, oral, contexts, there's not a lot of literary history or evidence, so its orthography is not standardized, and its origins are murky and uncertain.
So, of course, the Internet abounds with speculation. Here's some of the more credible speculation, from the Word Detective:
Do you know where the word “sercy“, “surcy“, “cerci” or “searcy” comes from? Do you have a plausible theory? Do you use it in conversation?
Word Detective posits:
I posed the question to the American Dialect Society mailing list, and received the following reply from Joan Hall, Associate Editor of DARE (Dictionary of American Regional English):
“The Dictionary of American Regional English files have anecdotal evidence for the term “sirsee”¹ (variously spelled “circe,” “circi,” “surcy”) from NC, SC, GA, and PA, as well as two reports from Buffalo, NY and Oklahoma, where the speakers were said to come from “someplace else.”
“All evidence is oral, so the spellings are speakers’ attempts to represent the pronunciation. The etymology is uncertain, but one plausible source is the Scots verb “sussie,” meaning “to take trouble, to care, to bother oneself.” This probably came to Scotland from the French “souci,” meaning “care, trouble.” The term seems to be especially well known in Columbia, SC, where it is strongly associated with a women’s college. Michael Montgomery of the English Department of the University of SC has reported its use there.”
Furthermore, as @Frank pointed out in the comments, a couple of Southern businesses, Surcees.com, a Southern florist, and Charleston Surcees, a caterer, have embedded the word surcee (so spelled) in their names, and they echo the potential etymology based in Scottish and Irish loanwords:
Surcee is a word, used in the South, that is believed to have its origins in the Scotch and Irish who settled in the region. The Scottish word for "surprise" is pronounced much like "surcee" and could be a phonetic form passed down from generation to generation. Another possible origin for the word is from the Irish term "sussie" which means to care.
I happened to be in Charleston the other week, and passed by Charleston Surcees, so I took a couple of pictures of the word used in the wild:
And one of a collection of various surcees, laid out beneath their definition:
All sources emphasize the word is uniquely Southern.
¹ As indicated, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) does indeed have a headword for "sirsee", but unfortunately one needs a subscription to access its definition and details.
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
|
show 3 more comments
This appears to be slang, concentrated mostly in the Southern US. It is widely reported there, particularly in the Carolinas and Georgia, and its definition is just as you have it.
For example, from the blog The Room Mom:
What is a Sirsee?
Spelling variations: circe, circi, surcy, surcee
Definition (n): word used in the South to mean a small, thoughtful gift, unexpected gift, just because.
Because the word is mostly used in informal, oral, contexts, there's not a lot of literary history or evidence, so its orthography is not standardized, and its origins are murky and uncertain.
So, of course, the Internet abounds with speculation. Here's some of the more credible speculation, from the Word Detective:
Do you know where the word “sercy“, “surcy“, “cerci” or “searcy” comes from? Do you have a plausible theory? Do you use it in conversation?
Word Detective posits:
I posed the question to the American Dialect Society mailing list, and received the following reply from Joan Hall, Associate Editor of DARE (Dictionary of American Regional English):
“The Dictionary of American Regional English files have anecdotal evidence for the term “sirsee”¹ (variously spelled “circe,” “circi,” “surcy”) from NC, SC, GA, and PA, as well as two reports from Buffalo, NY and Oklahoma, where the speakers were said to come from “someplace else.”
“All evidence is oral, so the spellings are speakers’ attempts to represent the pronunciation. The etymology is uncertain, but one plausible source is the Scots verb “sussie,” meaning “to take trouble, to care, to bother oneself.” This probably came to Scotland from the French “souci,” meaning “care, trouble.” The term seems to be especially well known in Columbia, SC, where it is strongly associated with a women’s college. Michael Montgomery of the English Department of the University of SC has reported its use there.”
Furthermore, as @Frank pointed out in the comments, a couple of Southern businesses, Surcees.com, a Southern florist, and Charleston Surcees, a caterer, have embedded the word surcee (so spelled) in their names, and they echo the potential etymology based in Scottish and Irish loanwords:
Surcee is a word, used in the South, that is believed to have its origins in the Scotch and Irish who settled in the region. The Scottish word for "surprise" is pronounced much like "surcee" and could be a phonetic form passed down from generation to generation. Another possible origin for the word is from the Irish term "sussie" which means to care.
I happened to be in Charleston the other week, and passed by Charleston Surcees, so I took a couple of pictures of the word used in the wild:
And one of a collection of various surcees, laid out beneath their definition:
All sources emphasize the word is uniquely Southern.
¹ As indicated, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) does indeed have a headword for "sirsee", but unfortunately one needs a subscription to access its definition and details.
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
|
show 3 more comments
This appears to be slang, concentrated mostly in the Southern US. It is widely reported there, particularly in the Carolinas and Georgia, and its definition is just as you have it.
For example, from the blog The Room Mom:
What is a Sirsee?
Spelling variations: circe, circi, surcy, surcee
Definition (n): word used in the South to mean a small, thoughtful gift, unexpected gift, just because.
Because the word is mostly used in informal, oral, contexts, there's not a lot of literary history or evidence, so its orthography is not standardized, and its origins are murky and uncertain.
So, of course, the Internet abounds with speculation. Here's some of the more credible speculation, from the Word Detective:
Do you know where the word “sercy“, “surcy“, “cerci” or “searcy” comes from? Do you have a plausible theory? Do you use it in conversation?
Word Detective posits:
I posed the question to the American Dialect Society mailing list, and received the following reply from Joan Hall, Associate Editor of DARE (Dictionary of American Regional English):
“The Dictionary of American Regional English files have anecdotal evidence for the term “sirsee”¹ (variously spelled “circe,” “circi,” “surcy”) from NC, SC, GA, and PA, as well as two reports from Buffalo, NY and Oklahoma, where the speakers were said to come from “someplace else.”
“All evidence is oral, so the spellings are speakers’ attempts to represent the pronunciation. The etymology is uncertain, but one plausible source is the Scots verb “sussie,” meaning “to take trouble, to care, to bother oneself.” This probably came to Scotland from the French “souci,” meaning “care, trouble.” The term seems to be especially well known in Columbia, SC, where it is strongly associated with a women’s college. Michael Montgomery of the English Department of the University of SC has reported its use there.”
Furthermore, as @Frank pointed out in the comments, a couple of Southern businesses, Surcees.com, a Southern florist, and Charleston Surcees, a caterer, have embedded the word surcee (so spelled) in their names, and they echo the potential etymology based in Scottish and Irish loanwords:
Surcee is a word, used in the South, that is believed to have its origins in the Scotch and Irish who settled in the region. The Scottish word for "surprise" is pronounced much like "surcee" and could be a phonetic form passed down from generation to generation. Another possible origin for the word is from the Irish term "sussie" which means to care.
I happened to be in Charleston the other week, and passed by Charleston Surcees, so I took a couple of pictures of the word used in the wild:
And one of a collection of various surcees, laid out beneath their definition:
All sources emphasize the word is uniquely Southern.
¹ As indicated, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) does indeed have a headword for "sirsee", but unfortunately one needs a subscription to access its definition and details.
This appears to be slang, concentrated mostly in the Southern US. It is widely reported there, particularly in the Carolinas and Georgia, and its definition is just as you have it.
For example, from the blog The Room Mom:
What is a Sirsee?
Spelling variations: circe, circi, surcy, surcee
Definition (n): word used in the South to mean a small, thoughtful gift, unexpected gift, just because.
Because the word is mostly used in informal, oral, contexts, there's not a lot of literary history or evidence, so its orthography is not standardized, and its origins are murky and uncertain.
So, of course, the Internet abounds with speculation. Here's some of the more credible speculation, from the Word Detective:
Do you know where the word “sercy“, “surcy“, “cerci” or “searcy” comes from? Do you have a plausible theory? Do you use it in conversation?
Word Detective posits:
I posed the question to the American Dialect Society mailing list, and received the following reply from Joan Hall, Associate Editor of DARE (Dictionary of American Regional English):
“The Dictionary of American Regional English files have anecdotal evidence for the term “sirsee”¹ (variously spelled “circe,” “circi,” “surcy”) from NC, SC, GA, and PA, as well as two reports from Buffalo, NY and Oklahoma, where the speakers were said to come from “someplace else.”
“All evidence is oral, so the spellings are speakers’ attempts to represent the pronunciation. The etymology is uncertain, but one plausible source is the Scots verb “sussie,” meaning “to take trouble, to care, to bother oneself.” This probably came to Scotland from the French “souci,” meaning “care, trouble.” The term seems to be especially well known in Columbia, SC, where it is strongly associated with a women’s college. Michael Montgomery of the English Department of the University of SC has reported its use there.”
Furthermore, as @Frank pointed out in the comments, a couple of Southern businesses, Surcees.com, a Southern florist, and Charleston Surcees, a caterer, have embedded the word surcee (so spelled) in their names, and they echo the potential etymology based in Scottish and Irish loanwords:
Surcee is a word, used in the South, that is believed to have its origins in the Scotch and Irish who settled in the region. The Scottish word for "surprise" is pronounced much like "surcee" and could be a phonetic form passed down from generation to generation. Another possible origin for the word is from the Irish term "sussie" which means to care.
I happened to be in Charleston the other week, and passed by Charleston Surcees, so I took a couple of pictures of the word used in the wild:
And one of a collection of various surcees, laid out beneath their definition:
All sources emphasize the word is uniquely Southern.
¹ As indicated, the Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) does indeed have a headword for "sirsee", but unfortunately one needs a subscription to access its definition and details.
edited Apr 11 '15 at 12:18
answered Feb 28 '15 at 13:45
Dan BronDan Bron
26.1k1286122
26.1k1286122
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
|
show 3 more comments
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
3
3
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
+ 1 - some more evidence: pensieve.typepad.com/pensieve/2007/07/sursee-circi-si.html
– user66974
Feb 28 '15 at 13:57
4
4
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
And more surcees.com/History_Behind_the_Name.html and charlestonsurcee.com/about (right hand panel)
– Frank
Feb 28 '15 at 14:09
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
What a great little expression, but is its use limited to only the South?
– Mari-Lou A
Feb 28 '15 at 14:12
4
4
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
@Mari-LouA According to all the sources I've been able to find so far, yes, only the South (and even more narrowly, mostly North and South Carolina). I can tell you that personally I've never heard it before today, and I'm from the Northeast.
– Dan Bron
Feb 28 '15 at 14:24
1
1
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
I wish I could upvote you again!
– Mari-Lou A
Apr 11 '15 at 11:54
|
show 3 more comments
My mother (1919-1960) was from Yemassee, South Carolina, and used the term to describe a thoughtful, unexpected, unnecessary, & inexpensive gift thanking someone for helping resolve a pesky, annoying problem: a figurative pebble in one's shoe. The usual measure was that the help received was absolutely necessary, but relatively and objectively minor, particularly when compared to the problem itself. Like many, I have never seen the term in print and assumed it was a lower-case variation of the mythological Greek sorceress Circe. There's no connection with Circe, but I like the spelling. I suppose "lagniappe" or "cumshaw" comes the closest to the word's meaning.
add a comment |
My mother (1919-1960) was from Yemassee, South Carolina, and used the term to describe a thoughtful, unexpected, unnecessary, & inexpensive gift thanking someone for helping resolve a pesky, annoying problem: a figurative pebble in one's shoe. The usual measure was that the help received was absolutely necessary, but relatively and objectively minor, particularly when compared to the problem itself. Like many, I have never seen the term in print and assumed it was a lower-case variation of the mythological Greek sorceress Circe. There's no connection with Circe, but I like the spelling. I suppose "lagniappe" or "cumshaw" comes the closest to the word's meaning.
add a comment |
My mother (1919-1960) was from Yemassee, South Carolina, and used the term to describe a thoughtful, unexpected, unnecessary, & inexpensive gift thanking someone for helping resolve a pesky, annoying problem: a figurative pebble in one's shoe. The usual measure was that the help received was absolutely necessary, but relatively and objectively minor, particularly when compared to the problem itself. Like many, I have never seen the term in print and assumed it was a lower-case variation of the mythological Greek sorceress Circe. There's no connection with Circe, but I like the spelling. I suppose "lagniappe" or "cumshaw" comes the closest to the word's meaning.
My mother (1919-1960) was from Yemassee, South Carolina, and used the term to describe a thoughtful, unexpected, unnecessary, & inexpensive gift thanking someone for helping resolve a pesky, annoying problem: a figurative pebble in one's shoe. The usual measure was that the help received was absolutely necessary, but relatively and objectively minor, particularly when compared to the problem itself. Like many, I have never seen the term in print and assumed it was a lower-case variation of the mythological Greek sorceress Circe. There's no connection with Circe, but I like the spelling. I suppose "lagniappe" or "cumshaw" comes the closest to the word's meaning.
answered Nov 14 '15 at 14:45
Joseph M GaffneyJoseph M Gaffney
311
311
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I had a French girl friend (exchange student) in college that used a word that sounded like "cerci" for a little present or small thoughtful gift. I seem to remember the word was a colloquial french contraction of the phase "cadeau de coeur" which means gift from the heart. It was informal french, usually used only in a family or with a loved one.
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I had a French girl friend (exchange student) in college that used a word that sounded like "cerci" for a little present or small thoughtful gift. I seem to remember the word was a colloquial french contraction of the phase "cadeau de coeur" which means gift from the heart. It was informal french, usually used only in a family or with a loved one.
add a comment |
I had a French girl friend (exchange student) in college that used a word that sounded like "cerci" for a little present or small thoughtful gift. I seem to remember the word was a colloquial french contraction of the phase "cadeau de coeur" which means gift from the heart. It was informal french, usually used only in a family or with a loved one.
I had a French girl friend (exchange student) in college that used a word that sounded like "cerci" for a little present or small thoughtful gift. I seem to remember the word was a colloquial french contraction of the phase "cadeau de coeur" which means gift from the heart. It was informal french, usually used only in a family or with a loved one.
answered Oct 15 '16 at 23:44
user201179user201179
211
211
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I grew up south of New Orleans and often gave or received a sussie - a small thoughtful gift. It was a common expression along the MS and LA gulf coast line. I only heard it pronounced. I always assumed it was spelled sussie (sus see). I have never heard it pronounced sursee. I am sure dialect plays a role in the pronunciation.
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I grew up south of New Orleans and often gave or received a sussie - a small thoughtful gift. It was a common expression along the MS and LA gulf coast line. I only heard it pronounced. I always assumed it was spelled sussie (sus see). I have never heard it pronounced sursee. I am sure dialect plays a role in the pronunciation.
add a comment |
I grew up south of New Orleans and often gave or received a sussie - a small thoughtful gift. It was a common expression along the MS and LA gulf coast line. I only heard it pronounced. I always assumed it was spelled sussie (sus see). I have never heard it pronounced sursee. I am sure dialect plays a role in the pronunciation.
I grew up south of New Orleans and often gave or received a sussie - a small thoughtful gift. It was a common expression along the MS and LA gulf coast line. I only heard it pronounced. I always assumed it was spelled sussie (sus see). I have never heard it pronounced sursee. I am sure dialect plays a role in the pronunciation.
answered Dec 17 '17 at 6:42
Sylvia BryanSylvia Bryan
111
111
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possible duplicate of How to express something given to a customer for "free in a non-immoral, non-sexual, non-promoting context"?
– FumbleFingers
Feb 28 '15 at 13:43
4
I don't think this is a duplicate; this isn't looking to find a word to express the concept, but to find a canonical spelling / reference for a word his wife uses.
– mattdm
Feb 28 '15 at 22:12
My mother was born in St. Joseph, MO. She and her sister would often exchange small gifts. They would say, it's just a sussie. I don't know the org.
– elizabth mckillip
9 hours ago