bodyjack

English

Etymology

Blend of body + hijack

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈbɒ.di.dʒæk/
  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈbɑ.di.d͡ʒæk/

Verb

bodyjack (third-person singular simple present bodyjacks, present participle bodyjacking, simple past and past participle bodyjacked)

  1. (science fiction) To forcibly seize control of someone's body, sometimes by replacing or exchanging minds.
    • 1998 November, Chris Claremont, “The First The Final? Fire!”, in Fantastic Four, volume 3, number 11, page 17:
      My accent may be Brooklyn, not the BBC, pal, but I still got a brain in my head. We've been bodyjacked. Some kind of mind-switch—yours to our bodies, ours ta yours. No offense but this ain't exactly the first time we've been cut loose in that particular neighborhood.
    • 2007 January 15, “The Devil Wears Swastikas”, in Newsweek, page 66:
      This sounds like a spinoff of "The Boys From Brazil"—until about page 70, when D.T. reveals that he's actually a devil who'd bodyjacked an SS officer.
    • 2007 April 22, Scott Bennie, “Re: Daleks In Manhattan”, in rec.arts.drwho (Usenet), retrieved 2017-03-31, message-ID <1177302553.825978.79940@n59g2000hsh.googlegroups.com>:
      I'm not a big fan, however, of the daleks stealing the Cyberman's bodyjacking schtick, and I thought the hybrid looked embarrassingly silly.
    • 2014, Bruce Coville, Aliens Stole My Body, →ISBN, page 24:
      Then I did something that astonished both of us: I took control of our body. [] What are you doing? demanded Seymour. Where are you going? This is my body. Give it back! [] I've been bodyjacked! accused Seymour.
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