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#101807 04/27/03 04:29 PM
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would you call a geek - a workoholic?? i mean, can i use these word instead.. cause the meaning isn't the same..


#101808 04/27/03 04:47 PM
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Many very bright people lack social skills. Their resentful intellectual inferiors jealously
invent pejorative appellations for them. "Geek" is just one of many
I'm not bright enough to be classed as a geek. My social skills are only moderate..


#101809 04/27/03 04:50 PM
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not all geeks are workaholics, and not all workaholics are geeks.





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#101810 04/27/03 05:00 PM
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here is the Word Detective:
http://www.word-detective.com/back-g.html#geek

Originally, to be a "geek" was to have fallen so low as to be willing to do anything for a living, no matter how disgusting the task. Only in the last few years has it been used as a synonym for "nerd."

substitute "long hours of technology-based work" into his formula and I guess you could make the case.



#101811 04/27/03 05:04 PM
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What is a geek? Merriam-Webster's Dictionary offers the original definition of "a
carnival performer often billed as a wild man whose act usually includes
biting the head off a live chicken or snake," as well the more modern, slangier
meaning, "a person often of an intellectual bent who is disapproved of." (No
dictionary that I've yet consulted - not even the relatively "hep" American Heritage
College Dictionary - mentions the current computer-affiliated sense of "geek".)



#101812 04/27/03 05:07 PM
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bill, OneLook.com lists six (6) technology-based ("Computing") resources for geek.

http://onelook.com/?w=geek&ls=a

#101813 04/27/03 05:10 PM
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well, I'm not programatically savvy enough to be a geek, but on some forums I habituate, geek is a term of pride.



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#101814 04/27/03 05:24 PM
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i understand, but it's not exactly what i wanted to know :) i'm not sure how to express that.. in poland a geek (after my dictionary :)) is a student learning very hard. it's rather pejorative. but you won't call an employee working hard a geek but a workoholic. would you call a student a workoholic meaning it in negative sense?? (i mean only that one particular situation)


#101815 04/27/03 05:29 PM
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>would you call a student a workoholic meaning it in negative sense?

the goof-offs might, in a sarcastic way, hoping to vindicate their own laziness.


#101816 04/27/03 05:29 PM
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would you call a student a workoholic meaning it in negative sense??

yes, you could. I would think that workaholic is almost always used in a negative sense.

<edit> good point, tswum.


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#101817 04/27/03 05:52 PM
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...geek is a term of pride.

I warned you about that 'pride' stuff!




#101818 04/27/03 06:04 PM
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now, i'm confused.. who's a goof-off ??


#101819 04/27/03 06:11 PM
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well, it depends on whether you think that all students should be hard working. if you do, then it wouldn't be nice to call a hard working student a workaholic, because that has negative connotations.
goof-offs are the students who don't work so hard at school, but probably enjoy themselves a bit more. they would call a hard working student a workaholic because then the goof offs would feel better about not getting their work done.

or something like that.



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#101820 04/27/03 08:29 PM
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From my children, who are both infinitely hipper than their dear old dad, I learn that Geekness may be subdivided into classes, by the attachement of a modifier, indicating the locus of geekhood, e.g. cyber-geek, techno-geek, etc.




#101821 04/27/03 10:41 PM
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The crowd cheered, but it was all Geek to me.

(Apologies to WS)


#101822 04/27/03 10:50 PM
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Perhaps the last entry proves that wofahulicodoc
is a "noso-geek"?




#101823 04/28/03 12:01 AM
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Dear rav, never you mind (don't pay any attention to) all these people; *I'll answer your question. A goof-off is anyone who does other things, usually easier or more fun things, than what he is supposed to do. If, before a big test, a student goes to parties and does not study, he is goofing off. So am I, right now, from my housework (chores)!


#101824 04/28/03 12:04 AM
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I love my new antlers!





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#101825 04/28/03 12:49 AM
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Now dang it, you ol' pronghorn, I didn't think yours was clear enough for a non-native-English speaker--so there!


#101826 04/28/03 07:30 AM
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Gnothi seaton - but I don't and it's all geek to me ...


#101827 04/28/03 09:38 AM
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There was a term we used when I was back in college in the 60s for students who studied constantly and had no social life. I've forgotten the term.

It certainly wasn't workaholic, since as has been suggested above, that would more readily apply to someone actively in the work orce.

It wasn't geek since the only geeks anyone ever referred to would have been the carnival geeks wwh pointed out above.

It wasn't drone, but it was something like drone, which makes me think it may have been drudge.

Can anyone think of the term that I've forgotten? We generally applied it to those students who did not have any outstanding intellectual ability, but worked so hard in preparing for courses that they appeared to have more to work with mentally than they actually possessed in terms of original thinking.


#101828 04/28/03 10:22 AM
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From my children, ... I learn that Geekness may be subdivided into classes ... indicating the locus of geekhood, e.g. cyber-geek, techno-geek, etc. ~ Father Steve

We used to have 'propeller heads', when did they vanish from the vocabulary?




#101829 04/28/03 12:53 PM
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Why on earth?!


#101830 04/28/03 01:14 PM
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#101831 04/28/03 02:07 PM
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Ok, so propeller beanies got associated with computer people when I wasn't looking. That'll teach me to try and stay more current...on the other hand, maybe not.
Thanks, though.


#101832 04/28/03 05:13 PM
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#101833 04/28/03 05:22 PM
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The propeller beanie certainly predates the computer geek. I wanted a propeller beanie when I was a wee tad. By the time I got it I was too old (and too young) to wear it.


#101834 04/28/03 06:58 PM
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dictionary.com gives the following synonyms for 'nerd,' (the meaning of which includes a part of the definition that Wordwind mentioned...)

nerd

n : a student who studies excessively [syn: swot, grind, wonk]


Source: WordNet ® 1.6, © 1997 Princeton University




#101835 04/28/03 07:08 PM
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Dictionary.com (again!) gives an interesting peek at the origin of this word, and that of some others...

"Our Living Language: Our word geek is now chiefly associated with student and computer slang; one probably thinks first of a computer geek. In origin, however, it is one of the words American English borrowed from the vocabulary of the circus, which was a much more significant source of entertainment in the United States in the 19th and early 20th century than it is now. Large numbers of traveling circuses left a cultural legacy in various and sometimes unexpected ways. For example, Superman and other comic book superheroes owe much of their look to circus acrobats, who were similarly costumed in capes and tights. The circus sideshow is the source of the word geek, “a performer who engaged in bizarre acts, such as biting the head off a live chicken.” We also owe the word ballyhoo to the circus; its ultimate origin is unknown, but in the late 1800s it referred to a flamboyant free musical performance conducted outside a circus with the goal of luring customers to buy tickets to the inside shows. Other words and expressions with circus origins include bandwagon (coined by P.T. Barnum in 1855) and Siamese twin."

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.




#101836 04/28/03 07:50 PM
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thanks, anchita! I never knew that about Superman, never would have guessed. and I love the word ballyhoo; it'd be a great name for a band..



not sure I ever welcomed you to the board; Welcome!



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#101837 04/28/03 08:28 PM
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Thanks etaoin, and all who have welcomed a 'stranger' like me, individually or on the behalf of the forum... I was pleasently surprised to receive the attention and welcome that I've been given, (and am sure others of my category are given too.) Great place to be in, and an encouraging, if rare, trend in the otherwise dog-eat-dog world...
Thanks again :)


#101838 04/28/03 08:57 PM
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Chopped liver, headed out, stage left ...


#101839 04/28/03 08:57 PM
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Can anyone think of the term that I've forgotten? We generally applied it to those students who did not have any outstanding intellectual ability, but worked so hard in preparing for courses that they appeared to have more to work with mentally than they actually possessed in terms of original thinking.

May I present one more offering: the person who works so hard that s/he gets much further than one would have thought based solely on apparent inherent ability:

overachiever

And that should be a compliment !


#101840 04/29/03 01:15 AM
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Chopped liver
I was still trying to figure out: Gnothi seaton...

is that some of that funky Latin?



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#101841 04/29/03 01:32 AM
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know thyself (to be human and follow the god)

-joe (medan agan) friday


#101842 04/29/03 08:54 AM
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Taking up tsuwm's implied challenge, a bit of Googling on 'medan agan' shows this expression, like 'gnothi seaton', to be an inscription on the walls of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi (and probably other places). If I have understood correctly, although it is commonly taken to mean 'nothing in excess' it is probably closer to 'moderation in all things', or 'follow the median path', recognising the human (or Dionysian) need for celebration of all there is to enjoy but calling for balance, not obsession.

How'd I do?


#101843 04/29/03 10:51 AM
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dxb - A classic case of overachievement... well done!


#101844 04/29/03 11:36 AM
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For the sake of completeness and just to confuse rav a little more, I might add that in England a common term for anyone who is highly involved in their hobby can be prefixed or suffixed with trainspotter. Trainspotting, i.e. the collecting of endless info on trains, is of course the archetypal nerd hobby, bar linguistics :-) So, for example, those who go to clubs and spend all night looking over the DJ's shoulder at the records played are called 'trainspotter clubbers' and someone who is obsessed with the Queen would be a 'Queen trainspotter'.


#101845 04/29/03 12:14 PM
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a common term for anyone who is highly involved in their hobby

To confuse still further, such people are also often termed 'Anaracks'.


#101846 04/29/03 12:19 PM
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Can anyone think of the term that I've forgotten? We generally applied it to those students who did not have any outstanding intellectual ability, but worked so hard in preparing for courses that they appeared to have more to work with mentally than they actually possessed in terms of original thinking.
Old-fashioned, but I've read of that type of student being called a grind.

I would say that Dr. Bill's Merriam-Webster's Dictionary offers the original definition of "a
carnival performer often billed as a wild man whose act usually includes
biting the head off a live chicken or snake,"
and anchita's “a performer who engaged in bizarre acts, such as biting the head off a live chicken.” most definitely fit tsuwm's Originally, to be a "geek" was to have fallen so low as to be willing to do anything for a living, no matter how disgusting the task.
Thanks, anchita, for that info. on circuses.


#101847 04/29/03 12:51 PM
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To repeat myself: why on earth? :-)


#101848 04/29/03 01:22 PM
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To repeat myself: why on earth? :-)


Apparently some spell anarak with a 'c', some without, think I prefer it without, but anyway Jackie, here's a definition from the Dictionary of Slang:

anorak: Noun. An often socially inept person, having an obsessive interest in a hobby or subject. Usually has little or no fashion sense, and errs towards eccentricity. Originates from the 'trainspotter' look, of wearing anoraks; spending so much time at the end of station platforms in all weathers necessitates the wearing of such attire. Cf. 'trainspotter'. Derog.


#101849 04/29/03 01:32 PM
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My earliest recollection of the word geek dates back to the 1947 Hollywood movie "Nightmare Alley," in which the chicken-head-biting sideshow attraction described as such was played by Tyrone Power. Strange casting, but it worked.


#101850 04/29/03 04:27 PM
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anorack: noun, an article of clothing, similar to what in US is called a ski jacket, heavy weight, with a hood, and often a collar that zips shut, and covers the chin.

sometimes a Pull over, with a half zipper and center (single) pocktet sometimes with a full front zipper, and two deep pockets. the outside is usually made out of ripstop nylon, or some other wind/weather resistant fabric.
the word is from one of the Northern canadian tribes of indians (cree? eskimo?) and is commonly used in UK--

and as David says, commonly worn by trainspotters, so it has become by association, "nerd cloths".. (just like flood pants and pocket protectors here are symbolic of nerds)


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Grind! That's it, AnnaS! I've been trying to remember that word for the longest time. Thanks for providing it.


#101852 04/29/03 05:19 PM
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>Grind! That's it, AnnaS!

welcome to the land of the Virtual Cloaking Device (VCD), anchita! <g>


#101853 04/29/03 06:25 PM
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Virtual Cloaking Device

Or either shape-shifting, one.


#101854 04/29/03 06:27 PM
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Rumors of my pre-cloaking have been greatly exaggerated.


#101855 04/29/03 08:28 PM
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Oh, sorry 'bout that, anchita. I hadn't read all your pasted synonyms for geek. Didn't mean to cloak you.

But, still, thanks, AnnaS, for emphasizing grind, a very useful word.


#101856 04/29/03 08:31 PM
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..and Jackie, did you enjoy sharing the VCD with anchita?


#101857 04/29/03 08:53 PM
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Is it me, or what?




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I simply misread and misread again.

To Anchita and Jackie:

Mea culpa.

To AnnaS: Were you possibly thinking of grinds in the last 24 hours and I somehow picked up psychic sympathetic vibrations?


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Quick definitions (grind)


noun: the act of grinding
noun: a student who studies excessively
noun: hard monotonous routine work
verb: reduce to small pieces or particles by pounding or abrading (Example: "Grind the spices in a mortar")
verb: dance by rotating the pelvis in an erotically suggestive way
verb: make a grating or grinding sound by rubbing together
verb: press or grind with a crunching noise
verb: work hard






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I'm pickin' up good vibrations
She's giving me excitations
I'm pickin' up good vibrations
(Oom bop bop good vibrations)

http://www.bajeca.com/volume/goodvibrations.htm


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#101861 04/30/03 10:09 AM
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I remember sitting in a bar, listening to this song on the juke box, noticing the A theme, the variation on the A theme, the B theme, the recapitulation of the A theme, etc., etc., and saying to myself, "This is a sonata." I have been unable to rediscover what I meant by sonata in this context. Perhaps someone more musically literate than I could fill in my blanks.


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Here's a primer in very basic sonata form:

Exposition: That's where you hear the main theme, which can actually be highly complex as in Beethoven's sonatas. In other words, the main theme may have sub themes.

Development: This is the section where the main theme can be modified, explored, go off into the stratosphere, become almost unrecognizable and new offshoots become developed.

Recapitulation: You're back home again. The primary theme is fully recognizable. Composers may modify the presentation as compared with the theme's appearance in the exposition, but your ear will tell you you're back home again.


#101863 04/30/03 12:36 PM
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very basic sonata form

Sounds like Good Vibrations.


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Dang, eta, tell the whole world, why don'tcha? And here I was, comfortably mantled (no, Zed, NOT horny!!!). Flattered to be compared to the incomparable, though!


#101865 05/01/03 12:10 PM
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This is for Rav: I am sitting here at work, reading posts on AWADtalk. I am NOT doing any actual® work. Therefore, I am "goofing off". So I am a "goof-off". This happens more than it should, but AWADtalk is addictive. I need a 12-step program or sumpin'...



What sane person could live in this world and not be crazy? -Ursula K. Le Guin, author (1929- )
#101866 05/01/03 12:23 PM
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actual® work

Dare I?
ROTFLMAO!


#101867 05/01/03 05:22 PM
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Don't do it...




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