A ‘nerd’ can be a ‘geek’ and also a ‘wonk’

The word "nerd" originated comparatively recently, in 1950, in Dr. Seuss’ “If I Ran the Zoo.” But the concept of nerdity has a long history.

Staff

July 31, 2023

One of my Christmas gifts last year was a pair of socks in bold blue, green, and yellow proclaiming me a “BIG OL’ WORD NERD.” I own the soft impeachment. And if you regularly read this column, you may be a BIG OL’ WORD NERD, too.

Nerd originated comparatively recently, in 1950, in Dr. Seuss’ “If I Ran the Zoo.” Its current sense, Merriam-Webster says, describes “one slavishly devoted to intellectual or academic pursuits.”

The concept of nerdity has a long history. The Oxbridge and Ivy League colleges traditionally had disparaging terms for students who worked too hard and devoted themselves too diligently to learning: swot in England, grind in the United States.

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Beyond that, bookworm, egghead, wonk, and bluestocking (for women) are not terms of admiration, suggesting undue attention to intellectual activity.

Rather, the “gentleman’s C,” a mere passing grade, has been the goal rather than trying too hard, and one can trust that such a graduate will never bore you at parties with excessive erudition.

Geek, originally a term for a carnival performer who would, for example, bite off the heads of live chickens, has similarly come to indicate an unattractive intellectual, carrying a slightly different connotation of excessive enthusiasm.  

Dork, from the 1960s, identifying a person who is socially inept or awkward, overlaps somewhat with nerd, who is socially awkward from being too studious, thus liable to bore you with esoteric knowledge. All three – nerd, dork, and geek – suggest social ineptitude.

In a familiar pattern, people subjected to pejorative terms can seize on them and flaunt them as a badge of pride. The term for this is “re-appropriation” or “reclamation.” A linked term that linguists use is “amelioration,” in which the original negative sense comes to take on positive connotations. 

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Yankee, for example, was originally Britons’ disparaging term for the American Colonists, who proudly took it up as a badge of national identity.

(You may know E.B. White’s formulation: “To foreigners, a Yankee is an American. To Americans, a Yankee is a Northerner. To Northerners, a Yankee is a New Englander. To New Englanders, a Yankee is a Vermonter. And in Vermont, a Yankee is somebody who eats pie for breakfast.”)

So the computer specialists at Best Buy appropriate an originally negative term and identify themselves as the Geek Squad. And, of course, I wear those socks. How about you?

John McIntyre was an editor for 34 years at The Baltimore Sun.