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The Yuppie Handbook 1984 Detroit카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 19. 11:06
Back in 1984, the Computer Era was in full swing. It was a year when a slew of new words entered the Oxford English Dictionary, all devoted to computerese.
Habitual users of the Internet became Netheads 1 and netizens2; people were talking about WIMPs 3 as alternatives to command line input; some folks were discovering that a computer virus 4 could cause a fuckload of trouble 5; yuppies 6 were discovering the Vodafone 7; and people with an obsessive interest in computers became geeks. 1984?In this sense of the word, the first written example is traced back to a Usenet group on February 20th, 1984, in a little couplet;I was a lonely young computer geek,With a program due most every week.However, by the middle of the 90’s, it was being used in some cases as a synonym for nerd. Technology writer Rudy Rucker wrote;Geek is the proud, insider term for nerd. If you are not a dedicated techie, don’t use this word.Notice how he suggests that geek and nerd are synonymous but also asserts its status as a “techie” word. This continued into the early 21st century, as exemplified by an article in the UK’s Independent newspaper on June 4th, 2001;We’re the nerds, the geeks, the dweebs: the men and women who can spend 20 hours straight contemplating 600 bytes of obscure, arcane, impenetrable computer code.Now we have dweebs 9 added to the mix, but there is still the link to computer and software being made. Then you're a geek!Yet although most people understand geek as an American slang word for technophiles, computer hobbyists, and software developers, it’s also a regional dialect word from the north of England, used to describe;A person, a fellow, esp.
The Yuppie Handbook 1984 Detroit Michigan
One who is regarded as foolish, offensive, worthless, etc. (OED)Although its first recorded use is in a dictionary of northern slang dated 1876, it made its way across the Atlantic and to the West Coast, where an edition of the San Francisco Examiner on 28th April, 1908 we find;A geek who spends his spare time making Czar removers was slammed into the city cooler.The meaning began to change during the first half of the 20th century such that by the 1950’s it had also come to be used to refer to “an overly diligent, unsociable student; any unsociable person obsessively devoted to a particular pursuit. (OED)” This definition is actually edging real close to that of a nerd.So what then is a nerd, as opposed to a geek? Although there appears to be some interchangeability going on, the modern distinction is that a nerd is;A person who pursues an unfashionable or highly technical interest with obsessive or exclusive dedication.
(OED)This is a more general definition than that of a geek, and indeed, it could be argues that a geek is a type of nerd, except that the “obsessive or exclusive dedication” is to computers and technology. However, it would be inaccurate to call someone who is, say, totally fascinated with etymology to the extent that they write about it every day as a geek, but they would mist assuredly be well suited to the title of nerd. Sheldon=nerdThe origin of nerd is still disputed and unlikely to be ever settled with any certainty. One popular notion is that it came from an animal in the book If I Ran The Zoo by Dr. Seuss – a small, unkempt, humanoid creature with a large head and a comically disapproving expression. More scatologically, another suggestion is that it is a euphemism for turd, but there is little supporting evidence, and it seems a very big stretch to somehow change the meaning of turd to nerd.
Finally, one other etymythology is that it’s backward slang for drunk (“knurd”). I’d love this one to be true but again, it seems rather spurious and too good to be true; and in etymology, if an explanation seems “too good to be true,” it’s likely to be false! The original nerdThe Dr. Seussian hypothesis at least has a better chance of being the origin.