Use of 'pussy' as term of endearment

Solution 1:

According to etymonline.com, the word pussy is a diminutive of the word puss, which means cat, and which was also used as both an insult and, subsequently, a term of endearment for women (emphasis mine):

puss (n.1)

 "cat," 1520s, but probably much older than the record, perhaps imitative of the hissing sound commonly used to get a cat's attention. A conventional name for a cat in Germanic languages and as far off as Afghanistan; it is the root of the principal word for "cat" in Rumanian (pisica) and secondary words in Lithuanian (puz), Low German (puus), Swedish dialect katte-pus, etc. Applied to a girl or woman from c. 1600, originally in a negative sense, implying unpleasant cat-like qualities; but by mid-19c. in affectionate use.

Puss gave rise to pussy which was used in the same basic way:

pussy (n.1)

"cat," 1726, diminutive of puss (n.1), also used of a rabbit (1715). As a term of endearment for a girl or woman, from 1580s (also used of effeminate men). To play pussy was World War II RAF slang for "to take advantage of cloud cover, jumping from cloud to cloud to shadow a potential victim or avoid recognition."

I remember being quite shocked as an adolescent when, while reading an Agatha Christie novel, I came across as description of a kindly old lady as "a nice old pussy" (the quote below may or may not be the one I remember, I found it in what seems to be a collected edition entitled "A Caribbean Mystery ; A Pocket Full of Rye ; The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side ; They Do it with Mirrors available in Google Books):

excerpt

I also found the following in The Detective Novels of Agatha Christie: A Reader's Guide by James Zemboy:

"A Nice Old Pussy" who lives with Ann Shapland's mother and copes most of the time.

And, in the same book, an explanation of the usage for modern readers:

excerpt from the book

I found few other examples. I'm sure there are more but, as you can imagine, my search was confounded by the other, more vulgar meaning of the word. This one is from The Life and Letters of the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Muller, Volume 1, and seems to be used to describe the author's daughter, of all people:

book excerpt

So yes, the word was indeed used as a form of endearment, at least as recently as the first half of the previous century. However, I strongly advise you not to use the word as a term of endearment. You will very likely be misunderstood unless the context is very clear.

Finally, while I have spent 4 years living in the UK, that was more than a decade ago and I can't claim to be an expert on BrE. Nevertheless, I will attest to never having heard the term used as a form of endearment for non-felines there and I would be very surprised to learn that said usage is still common.

Solution 2:

One has to be very careful in the UK with the indiscriminate use of word "pussy". At its most innocuous, it's a harmless derivative of the word pussycat or puss, an almost child-speak reference to a cat, rather as doggie is to dog. Hereinafter its use becomes the staple of banter between adolescent males and those males whose minds have never advanced beyond adolescence and who appear to be fixated with a woman's pudendum. However, the use of pussy in this sense continues apace with those who have no wish to ratchet up profane language to the much more offensive C-word. (Countless numbers of people have no such inhibitions!) Pussy is also a familiar trigger word between comedians and their audiences in form of double entendre. One thinks of the character of the cat-loving Mrs Slocombe in the BBC's popular sitcom of the 1970's, "Are You Being Served?" Mrs Slocombe's pussy was a running gag. Then, of course, there was the movie character of Pussy Galore (played by Honor Blackman) in the cult Bond movie, "Goldfinger" (1964) All above Wikipedia)

Solution 3:

There are already good answers, but I think the following links may be useful:

Pussy (from Webster's Dictionary):

(colloquial, now rare) An affectionate term for a woman or girl, seen as having characteristics associated with cats such as sweetness. [from 16th c.]

Pussy:

  • according to "Words in Time and Place: Exploring Language.." pussy was used as a term of endearment in 16th century ballads, but, citing the OED, it says that this usage reappered only in the 19th century, probably on account of the fact that in the meantime "pussy" was used mainly with reference to its more derogatory meaning.

It is no longer commonly used as a term of endearment also because of the double entrade it would easily suggest nowadays.