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      • An over-the-top, obsessive fan of some hobby or media. They are a part of some fandom or speciality, their jokes and allusions no one can get except other geeks, they spend money on their hobby instead of some Serious Business.
      tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Geek
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GeekGeek - Wikipedia

    The word geek is a slang term originally used to describe eccentric or non-mainstream people; in current use, the word typically connotes an expert or enthusiast obsessed with a hobby or intellectual pursuit.

  3. Oct 17, 2014 · As a cultural rather than an overtly physical condition, freakery/geekery meant, to a certain extent, “to be accepted into a community unified on the basis of shared marginality” (Adams 2001:42). The identity of the geek, therefore, has historical precedents in stigma, exclusion and nonconformity.

    • Dweeb
    • Dork
    • Nerd
    • Geek

    This word is the youngest of the four, found in the 1960s. Dweeb’s associations with unintelligence stem from the possibility that the word is a fusion of dwarf andfeeb(short for “feeble-minded person”). This isn’t to say that dwarves are unintelligent! What may be an explanation for dweeb’s existence is that ‘60s college kids riffed on the physica...

    So, back in the 1960s, dorkmeant “penis.” (Must’ve been something in the air in the ’60s …) One of the earliest instances comes from the 1961 novel Valhalla by Jere Peacock, where dork had a fancy-seeming spelling: “You satisfy many women with that dorque?” This spelling of dorque suggests a connection to Dorque, a 1940s slang nickname for a solide...

    Nerd’s origins are really hazy. (Could the 1960s have anything to do with that?) The most frequently cited story is that Dr. Seuss coined the word, as the name of a bizarre-looking creature, in his 1950 children’s book If I Ran the Zoo. Suess also introduced nerd’s friends, “preep,” “proo,” and “nerkle” in the same book. A year later, Newsweek repo...

    Geek is found as early as the 1870s, originally mocking of “a foolish or worthless person.” It might be a variant of geck, a word for “fool, simpleton, or dupe” recorded in the 1500s. This geck, in turn, could come from a Germanic root meaning “to croak.” Geek. Geck. Croak. We can sort of hear it; can you? In the early 1900s, a geek was a circus pe...

  4. Jun 15, 2024 · The noun “geek” dates to the late 19th century, when it was an American slang word for a “foolish, offensive” or “worthless” person, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. By 1919, a “geek”...

    • Sarah Diamond
  5. In the early 20th century, geek was the term given to a carnival or circus performer, especially one whose act entailed biting the head off a live animal, such as a chicken or snake. Prior to this, the term existed as a slang word for a person who was regarded as a simpleton, or as foolish.

  6. Feb 23, 2024 · If you’re wondering what these terms mean, here’s a list of the most trending/confusing Gen-Z slang, along with their meanings from Urban Dictionary. How to speak Gen Z: Slang words explained ...

  7. tvtropes.org › pmwiki › pmwikiGeek - TV Tropes

    Geek is a cooler term for a fan. A devoted fan. An over-the-top, obsessive fan of some hobby or media. They are a part of some fandom or speciality, their jokes and allusions no one can get except other geeks, they spend money on their hobby instead of some Serious Business.

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