bogus
from
Jargon File (4.4.4, 14 Aug 2003)
bogus
adj.
1. Non-functional. "Your patches are bogus."
2. Useless. "OPCON is a bogus program."
3. False. "Your arguments are bogus."
4. Incorrect. "That algorithm is bogus."
5. Unbelievable. "You claim to have solved the halting problem for
Turing Machines? That's totally bogus."
6. Silly. "Stop writing those bogus sagas."
Astrology is bogus. So is a bolt that is obviously about to break. So
is someone who makes blatantly false claims to have solved a
scientific problem. (This word seems to have some, but not all, of the
connotations of {random} -- mostly the negative ones.)
It is claimed that bogus was originally used in the hackish sense at
Princeton in the late 1960s. It was spread to CMU and Yale by Michael
Shamos, a migratory Princeton alumnus. A glossary of bogus words was
compiled at Yale when the word was first popularized there about
1975-76. These coinages spread into hackerdom from CMU and MIT. Most
of them remained wordplay objects rather than actual vocabulary items
or live metaphors. Examples: amboguous (having multiple bogus
interpretations); bogotissimo (in a gloriously bogus manner);
bogotophile (one who is pathologically fascinated by the bogus);
paleobogology (the study of primeval bogosity).
Some bogowords, however, obtained sufficient live currency to be
listed elsewhere in this lexicon; see {bogometer}, {bogon},
{bogotify}, and {quantum bogodynamics} and the related but unlisted
{Dr. Fred Mbogo}.
By the early 1980s `bogus' was also current in something like hacker
usage sense in West Coast teen slang, and it had gone mainstream by
1985. A correspondent from Cambridge reports, by contrast, that these
uses of bogus grate on British nerves; in Britain the word means,
rather specifically, `counterfeit', as in "a bogus 10-pound note".
According to Merriam-Webster, the word dates back to 1825 and
originally referred to a counterfeiting machine.
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
60 Moby Thesaurus words for "bogus":
affected, apocryphal, artificial, assumed, bastard, brummagem,
colorable, colored, counterfeit, counterfeited, distorted,
dressed up, dummy, embellished, embroidered, ersatz, factitious,
fake, faked, false, falsified, feigned, fictitious, fictive,
forged, fraudulent, garbled, illegitimate, imitation, junky,
make-believe, man-made, mock, perverted, phony, pinchbeck,
pretended, pseudo, put-on, quasi, queer, self-styled, sham, shoddy,
simulated, snide, so-called, soi-disant, spurious, supposititious,
synthetic, tin, tinsel, titivated, twisted, unauthentic, ungenuine,
unnatural, unreal, warped
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