Tabby: The Cat Named After Silk



Atabby cat in a park.Photo by Hisashi from Japan[CC BY-SA 2.0],Recently, though, She of Little Talent informed me that the word tabby can mean other things too. Old SoLT also told me that tabby at first referred to a type of silk that was produced in a particular part of Baghdad.
Who knew?
First, the silkMerriam-Webstersays that the first meaning of tabbyis a “plain silk taffeta especially with a moiré finish, originally striped, later with a watered finish.” The word apparently came to us from the Frenchtabis, which came from the Arabical-῾Attābiyya, which was a Baghdad neighborhood where this type of cloth was made. The English word tabby started showing up in the mid-1600s to refer to this fabric (so says the Oxford English Dictionary).
This explanation makes sentences like “The Duke of York, who was dressed in a pale blue watered tabby” make sense—and sound a lot less disturbing (the 1760 quote is from Horace Walpole and appears in the OED).
Next, the catBy the late 1600s, tabbywas being linked with cat to describe the familiar striped cat—a tabby cat or tabby-cat—almost certainly because their coats resembled the silk of that name. Later still, in the 1700s, tabby cats came to be called just “tabbies.” By the 1800s, tabby could also refer to any female cat, as in “tabbies and toms” (though we think this is confusing, because old SoLT has met quite a few male tabbies).
Finally, a few other meaningsTabby can also mean
a dress made of tabby (the fabric, not the cat)an old maid or a gossipy woman (the OED suggests that this meaning may be a shortening of the name Tabitha—which could also be how tabbycame to refer to a female cat)a young womana very hard concrete made of lime with shells, gravel or stones (originally called tabby work).

But the best meaning of tabby is and will always be “a cat having a striped or brindled coat.”
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Published on January 16, 2015 02:00
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