A Nixie is a name given by the United States Postal Service to a piece of mail which is undeliverable as addressed.
It is derived from "nix", English slang for the German nichts ("nothing"), and "-ie", an item or a thing.
In the 20th century, the term "Nixie clerk" referred to a postal employee who determined what to do with undeliverable items,[1] which were not just poorly addressed mail, but ranged from torn-open envelopes of photographs, to lost and found wallets dropped into a mailbox.
In the early 21st century the word began to be printed in the upper left corner of yellow labels generated by the USPS's Postal Automated Redirection System (PARS).
With the advent of e-mail messages, the term receives wider use, and address changes are registered in what may be called the "Nixie list".