Foodie, Wordie: the Low-Brow Suffix -ie
September 7th, 2008We are watching the rise of a new suffix in US English which we should head off by all means possible. The suffix -ie seems to have begun its life as a misguided backformation of a plural. This backformation took place in words like cookies, the plural of cooky or cookey, a word whose final Y become IE before the plural suffix -s. If you remove the final S, as you do to recover the singular from other plural words, the result is a word ending on IE if you don’t know the ie-rule.
At first -ie was just a variant spelling of the old suffix -y, but now it seems to be taking off on its own. This spelling, where erstwhile stood -y, is now widely accepted and even preferable in many words such as cookie, brownie, and nightie. Semantically, it is just a variation on the spelling on -y in these cases.
However, in such words as cutie, druggie, meanie, and yuppie, there is a pejorative connotation which may be infecting the suffix itself. A little may even lie in hippie, which carries with it a sense of “rule-breaker, maverick, renegade”.
The reason I think this pejorative connotation may be infecting the suffix is the recent rise of two new words. A year or two ago, we began hearing the word foodie referring to someone who enjoys well-prepared if not excellent cuisine. If foodie does not carry a pejorative connotation, it certainly is a low-brow alternate to epicure, connoisseur, and gourmet.
No exact meaning has yet settled on this word but my take is that it refers to people who watch the Food Channel and follow such low-brow cooks as Emeril Lagasse, Rachael Ray, and Martha Stewart. Foodies are less connoisseurs of food than food dilettantes, cooking show personality groupies (groupie—there is another one).
Big deal. I don’t hang with foodies, so they don’t bother me. The latest word in this trend hits home, though—wordie! Wordies have their own website, wordie.org, where the idea is to play with words without actually learning anything about them.
Wordies are quite different from logophiles in their misconstrual of the importance of words and the role they play in our lives. Knowledge of words seems unimportant to wordies; words are just another topic of chit-chat to identify with. If not, they would have come up with a clerver name for themselves.
What will be next? Drinkies? Swimmies? Sunnies? Bungie-jumpies? Almost anything is possible so long as the meanings of these words evade capture. The important point to keep in mind is that these words lead at best questionable lives in our vocabulary as demonstrated by the reputation of their suffix.

My definition of the verb 