![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Stop saying that Kirk gave McCoy the nickname "Bones" from McCoy's line about his ex-wife. That's not why he has that nickname!
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Not only does such a genesis for a nickname make no sense, "Hey when we first met you said your wife left you with your bones after the divorce. It was an off-the-cuff flippant remark and using it as a nickname will likely stir up painful memories of your divorce!"
No. His nickname is "Bones" from the term "sawbones" a slang-term for a surgreon!
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Sawbones isn't in the lexicon today, let alone the 23rd century. It was a common phrase in the 1960's. Sort of like a Sheriff was often called a "tin man", or in the 70's the poliece were referred to as "the fuzz".
I don't know if the writers were consiously aware of the sawbones term, or if they were and because of the lack of use in modern lexicon decided to change the backstory based on that.
Emily Deschanel's Bones is called that because she's based on a forensic anthropoligist Kathy Reichs, who studies skeletal reconstruction in crime solving. A forensic anthropologist is not a surgeon and therefore not a "sawbones"