Certificate of Name
Sookie
Feminine
English
Meaning & Origin
Sookie is a diminutive of Susanna or Susan, ultimately deriving from the Hebrew name שׁוֹשַׁנָּה (Shoshanna), meaning "lily" or "rose." This name carries biblical resonance, appearing in the Old Testament Apocrypha as a woman falsely accused of adultery, rescued by the prophet Daniel. In the New Testament, Susanna is also a woman who ministers to Jesus.Etymology and HistoryThe name Sookie, along with its variants Sue, Suki, Sukie, Susie, emerged in English as affectionate nicknames for Susanna and Susan. These diminutives gained popularity in the 18th and 19th centuries as English-speaking families embraced common short forms for biblical and classical names. Susan itself rose to prominence in England after the Protestant Reformation, while Sookie likely gained usage later as a nursery favorite.Cultural SignificanceThe name is notably featured in the English nursery rhyme "Polly Put the Kettle On," where a verse references Sukey. In popular culture, Sookie has been borne by memorable fictional characters: Sookie St. James the chef from Gilmore Girls, and Sookie Stackhouse, the protagonist of The Southern Vampire Mysteries novels (adapted into HBO's True Blood). Yet it also appears in history and music: Sookie (Suki) Brownsdon, a British swimmer; Suki Waterhouse, actress and model; and the Steppenwolf song Sookie Sookie. As a parallel to Shushan and other international variants of Susanna — including Arabic Sawsan, Russian Syuzanna, and Armenian Shushanik — Sookie contributes to the universal lily-rose tradition traced from Egyptian sšn (lotus) through Greek Sousanna to Hebrew.Meaning: "lily" or "rose" (via Susanna)Origin: English diminutive, from Hebrew ShoshannaGender: FeminineUsage: English-speaking countriesVariants: Sue, Suki, Sukie, Susie, Suz
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