What I learned about the Southern Term Mammy While Working With a Ghanaian Nurse Named Mamme
The next night which was the last night I worked with her, I decided to ask her for the meaning of her name which she stated meant “Mother” in Ghanaian culture. It was as if a “light bulb turned on in my head”. At that moment, I explained to her that I was afraid to say her name because of the derogatory way in which it was used in the Southern slave times and she was also able to correlate the name probably was a name given to Ghanaian girls born to Ghananian women.
Simply amazing and now I have a whole new insight on the name Mammy and the southern way of how they messed up such a wonderfully meaningful name by pronouncing it with a "drawal" and calling all Black caretakers Mammys unlike the nice way Nanna or Nanny is used. Interesting stuff, eh! Featured Blog Photo of "Mammy's Cupboard," 1940 novelty architecture restaurant in Adams County, Mississippi
Read More on the Mammy archetype
The word mammy originally first started seeing usage in the southern parts of the United States during the Civil War. She is often portrayed within a narrative framework or other imagery of a domestic servant of African descent, generally good-natured, often overweight, and loud. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammy_archety...
Southern name Maime \ma(i)-me\ (probably is a variationof the African name Mamme...) Also Maime as a girl's name is a variant of Mamie. The baby name Maime sounds like Mayme and Mame. Other similar baby names are Jaime and Maire.
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Popularity of Maime
Maime is not a popular first name for women and an equally uncommon surname or last name for all people. (1990 U.S. Census) See Displayed at the link below the baby names popularity of the name Maime for girls. (2010 statistics) Compare Maime with its source form and related girl baby names.
http://www.thinkbabynames.com/meaning/0/Ma...

@ Sister Irma's blog Re: Mammy Archetype ... in response to my own blog (above).
I see that you can't appreciate what I learned while working the other night. (Lol) Well we can agree to disagree as usual.