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单词 boffin
释义

boffinn.

/ˈbɒfɪn/
Etymology: Origin unknown. Numerous conjectures have been made about the origin of the word but all lack foundation.
slang.
1. An ‘elderly’ naval officer.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > seafaring warrior or naval man > leader or commander > [noun] > naval officer > officers by personality
tarpaulinc1690
x-chaser1904
man-eater1929
boffin1941
roaring forties1948
1941 C. Graves Life Line 143 Their ages are as youthful as air crews. Thirty-two is considered the maximum... In H.M.S. Wasps' Nest, anyone aged thirty-two is officially a ‘boffin’. There is even a song about them... ‘He glares at us hard and he scowls, For we're the Flotilla Boffins.’
1942 ‘Sea-Wrack’ Random Soundings 71 We were ‘Old Boffins’, the Pay. and I. He had been in the Bank of England for many years, and in the R.N.R. almost as long... I hadn't been to sea in a professional capacity for some eighteen years.
2. A person engaged in ‘back-room’ scientific or technical research.The term seems to have been first applied by members of the Royal Air Force to scientists working on radar.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > systematic knowledge, science > [noun] > scientist
man of science1482
natural philosopher?1541
secretary of nature1580
artsman1632
experimental philosopher1651
artist1665
scientific1738
sciencist1778
scientist1834
scientician1841
scientiate1847
scient1854
sciencer1871
natural scientist1872
specialist1918
boffin1945
1945 Times 15 Sept. 5/4 A band of scientific men who performed their wartime wonders at Malvern and apparently called themselves ‘the boffins’.
1948 ‘N. Shute’ No Highway iii. 61 ‘What's a boffin?’ ‘The man from Farnborough. Everybody calls them boffins. Didn't you know?’.. ‘Why are they called that?’.. ‘Because they behave like boffins, I suppose.’
1948 Ld. Tedder in A. P. Rowe One Story of Radar p. vii I was fortunate in having considerable dealings in 1938–40 with the ‘Boffins’ (as the Royal Air Force affectionately dubbed the scientists).
1952 Picture Post 30 Aug. 20/1 Only a backroom boffin out of touch with the classroom could hold this pious belief.
1954 Economist 19 June (Suppl.) 6/3 The graduate from research—roughly..the boffin of industry.
1957 R. Watson-Watt Three Steps to Victory xxxiii. 201 The proud title of Boffin was first conferred on a few radar scientists by Royal Air Force officers with whom they worked in close co-operation... I am not quite sure about the true origins of this name of Boffin. It certainly has something to do with an obsolete type of aircraft called the Baffin, something to do with that odd bird, the Puffin; I am sure it has nothing at all to do with that first literary Back Room Boy, the claustrophiliac Colonel Boffin.
1958 Economist 25 Oct. 298/1 The unexpected success of the boffins' conference at Geneva..ending in agreement on the feasibility of controlling a nuclear test suspension.
3. British colloquial. In weakened use: an intellectual, an academic, a clever person; an expert in a particular field; esp. such a person perceived as lacking practical or social skills. Cf. egghead n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [noun] > intellectual person
illuminate1602
intellectualist1605
intelligence1648
intellectual1652
aerialist1778
intellect1842
intellectuality1863
cerebralist1890
highbrow1898
longhair1920
egghead1952
boffin1954
boff1984
1954 Times 9 Nov. 10/6 (advt.) You may know a ‘buffoon’ from a ‘boffin’ but when it comes to choosing cloth you would do well to ask your tailor.
1959 Brit. Jrnl. Educ. Stud. 8 24 The man of learning..has been labelled a ‘swot’ or, in our own times, a ‘boffin’ or an ‘egg-head’.
1973 Statistician 22 205 I've been in the business man and boy for 30 years, and don't need any boffin to tell me how to run it.
1990 O. Chadwick Michael Ramsey (1991) 73 The opinion of the world and society which thought of him as a boffin.
1993 Independent on Sunday 8 Aug. (Business section) 13/5 A third important sub-species [of currency dealers] is the options dealers, the boffins of the currency markets.

Derivatives

ˈboffinry n. (also ˈboffinery) boffins collectively; (also) the activity of a boffin.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > systematic knowledge, science > [noun] > scientist > collectively
boffinry1958
1958 Times Lit. Suppl. 14 Feb. 83/3 In one of those diverting interludes..he writes an anatomy of Boffinry.
1960 J. Maclaren-Ross Until Day she Dies viii. 132 I was engaged in some boffinery in a blasted back-room unit.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1972; most recently modified version published online March 2019).
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n.1941
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