Kammy is a diminutive-style English form, often related to Cammy or names beginning with Kam-.
Kammy occupies the warm, informal register of names — a nickname-turned-given-name with the easy intimacy of a name you'd hear called across a playground or a kitchen. It most commonly functions as a diminutive of Camille, the French form of the Latin Camillus, which designated a young attendant in Roman religious ceremonies. That original meaning — a child dedicated to sacred service — imbues even this lighthearted form with a thread of spiritual purpose.
Camille itself was borne memorably by the tragic heroine of Alexandre Dumas fils's novel La Dame aux Camélias, giving the name a romantic, melancholic literary shadow that Kammy largely steps around by leaning into the playful. Kammy also draws energy from its proximity to the Japanese word kami, meaning divine spirit or deity, a connection that gives parents with Japanese heritage a way to ground the name in something deeper than mere phonetics. In North American naming culture it became particularly visible in the 1980s and 1990s as part of a broader trend of softening formal names into affectionate everyday forms — Jenni, Tami, Cindi — and making those forms official at birth.
The double-m spelling distinguishes Kammy from Cami or Cammy, giving it a slightly bolder visual footprint on paper. It remains a name associated with warmth, sociability, and approachability — qualities that parents consciously or unconsciously project forward as aspirations for their children.