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Etymology. The word comes from English dialect geek or geck (meaning a "fool" or "freak"; from Middle Low German Geck). Geck is a standard term in modern ...
Oct 23, 2023 · The word came to mean "geek, klutz" by 1983 in teenager slang, for unknown reasons....
Geek was originally an early 20th-century term for a carnival worker who was so unskilled that the only thing the worker could do at the carnival to entice an ...
Started as carnival slang, likely from the British dialectal term geck (“a fool, dupe, simpleton”) (1510s), apparently from Dutch gek or Low German geck, ...
Etymology. probably from English dialect geek, geck fool, from Low German geck, from Middle Low German ; First Known Use. 1912, in the meaning defined at sense 3.
Jan 14, 2019 · To “geek” or “geek out” traces to the US in 1935, the OED says, to mean “To give up, to back down; to lose one's nerve.” “To geek” in a circus, ...
English word geek comes from British English dialect word geck (fool) which in turn derives from Middle Low German geck (fool, freak).
Oct 17, 2014 · But it wasn't until sometime in the early 19th century that, “the Scottish word geck, meaning 'fool,' changed to geek and began being used to ...
The earliest known use of the noun geek is in the 1870s. OED's earliest evidence for geek is from 1876, in a glossary by Francis Robinson.
Jan 24, 2023 · Geek, originally meaning sideshow freak (in particular, someone who ate odd animals), maybe from geck in the 1500s, meaning fool, dupe, ...