The word tutu can refer to only the skirt part of the costume. The bodice and tutu make up what is usually the entire costume, but which is called the tutu (by
synecdoche, wherein the part – the skirt – can embody the whole). The derivation of the word
tutu is unknown. The word was not recorded anywhere until 1881. One theory is that it is simply derived from the word
tulle (one of the materials from which it is made). A second theory is that the word comes from the slang of French children that refers to the buttocks (
cul). During that era, the
abonnés (rich male subscribers at the
Paris Opera Ballet) were accustomed to mix with the ballet girls in the foyer and arrange assignations. It is suggested the expression came from the abonnés playfully patting the back of the tulle dress with the saying
pan-pan cucul (French for ''I'll spank your bottom''). A third, related theory suggests a derivation from the more vulgar French word
cul (which can be used to refer to the bottom or genital area). During this era, women (including dancers) wore
pantalettes as underwear, which were open at the crotch. The abonnés favoured the very front rows in the hope of a scandalous view, and the skirt was modified for that reason. This is supported by the description by nineteenth-century balletomane,
Charles Nuitter, who defined
tutu as "a slang term for the very short petticoat worn by
danseuses in the interest of modesty." According to Etimonline,
tutu first appeared in 1910 and is derived from the French
tutu, which in turn was derived from the French
cucu, in turn derived from the French
cul meaning a bottom or backside. Similarly, Merriam-Webster claims that the word first appeared in 1913 and that it is derived from the French
tutu which is babytalk for a backside. ==History==