-oid


a suffix meaning “resembling,” “like,” used in the formation of adjectives and nouns (and often implying an incomplete or imperfect resemblance to what is indicated by the preceding element):
alkaloid; anthropoid; cardioid; cuboid; lithoid; ovoid; planetoid.
compare -ode1 .
-oid
suffix, suffix
indicating likeness, resemblance, or similarity anthropoid
word origin
from greek -oeidēs resembling, form of, from eidos form
-oid
suffix for “like, like that of,” from gk. -oeides, from eidos “form,” related to idein “to see,” eidenai “to know;” lit. “to see,” from pie -weid-es-, from base -weid- “to see, to know” (see vision).

-oid suff.
resembling; one that resembles: cancroid.
-oid
a suffix meaning “like” or “resembling,” as in ellipsoid, a geometric solid that resembles an ellipse.
-oid
suffix

used to form adjectives resembling or imitating what is indicated: blitzoid/ cheesoid/ technoid/ zomboid
used to form nouns something resembling or imitating what is indicated: flakoid/ fusionoid/ grouchoid/ klutzoid •this
is increasingly current, probably because of the popularity of fantasy and science fiction, esp among teenagers

[fr the scientific suffix -oid, fr greek -oeides, ultimately fr eidos, ”image, form”; dictionaries list over 1,800 -oid compounds, most of which date from the 1700s and 1800s]

jargon
(from “android”) a suffix used as in mainstream english to indicate a poor imitation, a counterfeit, or some otherwise slightly bogus resemblance. hackers will happily use it with all sorts of non-greco/latin stem words that wouldn’t keep company with it in mainstream english. for example, “he’s a nerdoid” means that he superficially resembles a nerd but can’t make the grade; a “modemoid” might be a 300-baud modem (real modems run at 144000 or up); a “computeroid” might be any bitty box.
“-oid” can also mean “resembling an android”, which was once confined to science-fiction fans and hackers. it too has recently (in 1991) started to go mainstream (most notably in the term “trendoid” for victims of terminal hipness). this is probably traceable to the popularisation of the term droid in “star wars” and its sequels.
coinages in both forms have been common in science fiction for at least fifty years, and hackers (who are often sf fans) have probably been making “-oid” jargon for almost that long (though gls and esr can personally confirm only that they were already common in the mid-1970s).
[jargon file]
(1999-07-10)

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