English Language & Usage Asked on February 2, 2021
Eensy weensy spider went up the water spout…
Does eensy weensy‘s origin precede the rhyme?
What was it used for originally?
Sorry, my Google-fu is badly lacking just now, and I am dying of curiosity.
Anyone know how this weird combination came to be?
According to the OED, the evolution for "eensy" is in fact, as Jim suggested in the comments:
tiny > teeny > teensy > eensy.
More specifically, the dating laid out in the OED offers this ordering for attestations leading up to "eensy weensy."
tiny > teeny > teeny-weeny > teensy > teensy-weensy > eeny-weeny > eensy-weensy
Tiny dates back to the sixteenth century. Teeny is first attested in the OED in 1802 in a quote that compares the two terms.
The adjective tiny, in some provinces teeny, is no doubt from this root.
Meanwhile, Teeny in reduplicated form as "teeny-weeny" appeared attested in 1842.
Did momor's yettle Dimmy want to put its teeny-weeny footseys in the gravy?
Teensy appeared in 1856 as a variation of teeny, and is attested in the reduplicated form that preceded "eensy weensy" as teensy-weensy in 1872.
Rose was no longer a funny teensy-weensy of an infant pig, but was now a half-grown, solid, fat porker.
Slightly later than that, and preceding "eensy-weensy," we have our first similar reduplicated variant, "eeny-weeny."
He [sc. a pet fox] was an eeny weeny cunning little red darling.
Finally, in 1904, we have our first attestation of "eensy" with "teensy," but the words are separated by a comma and do not appear as an idiomatic reduplication.
He thought they'd be about six or eight little ducks... There were only two ‘eensy’, ‘weensy’ little ones.
1935 offers our first attestation of "eensy weensy" as a reduplication, and it appears hyphenated.
Not even if they are eensy-weensy pieces?
Interestingly, the OED also offers an outlier variant "eentsy teentsy" appearing in 1914, but this does not appear to have played an etymological role in the formation of "eensy weensy."
If he discovered one edge protruding even an eentsy-teentsy bit beyond the others it would make him unhappy.
Answered by RaceYouAnytime on February 2, 2021
German for 'tiny' is 'winzig'. Think there's an etymological link?
Answered by Tim Nobes on February 2, 2021
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