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why so many words talk about a nerd? the geeks, dork. dull. nerd. what are difference among them?
21 juin 2017 22:57
Réponses · 4
1
Hi Kinson! When it comes to these synonyms, the differences can be a little subtle, but I'll try to explain them. Geek-someone who is socially awkward, and often does not fit in with mainstream society because of this awkwardness Nerd-can be similar to a geek, though less negative and may not actually be socially awkward (it depends); nerds are distinguished by being extremely interested in certain hobbies or interests, such as computers, games, etc. Dork-more negative than "geek" or "nerd" Dull-different altogether; someone who is "dull" is simply boring or uninteresting I would put "dork", "geek", and "nerd" on a spectrum, with "dork" being the most negative, "nerd" being the most positive," and "geek" being somewhere in the middle. Like I said, the differences can be subtle, but I hope this helped some! Best, Jacob
21 juin 2017
Definitely depends on region and age! Words like this (used by young people) come in and out of fashion. British view: geeks = really clever person, who is very interested in a particular subject. Now it has become cool and sexy to be a geek! Geeks are interesting, or millionaires in Silicon valley dork = sounds American and old fashioned. Means unfashionable (not necessarily clever) dull = adjective, not a noun. Means boring nerd = similar to geek but has not become cool! Jacob's definition is also good
22 juin 2017
"Geek" and "nerd" are (more or less) synonyms; your other two words are not. There are a few other synonyms for "geek/nerd", for example "anorak". Just about every concept has a set of synonyms; there's nothing special nor particularly large about the set that includes "geek/nerd/anorak/etc".
22 juin 2017
Jacob gave a good answer. I would like to point out that these terms do have regional variations, and what he said is what I understand to be in use in North America. Here 'dork' is quite different, and usually refers to someone that is inconsiderate and/or rude.
21 juin 2017
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