crufty
English
Etymology
cruft + -y. Arose after 1959, presumably mid-1960s.[1] Perhaps influenced by cruddy, crusty.[2]
Adjective
crufty (comparative cruftier, superlative cruftiest)
- (computing, informal) Relating to or containing cruft.
- (computing, informal) Poorly built and overly-complex, and unpleasant.
- Unrefined, dirty or worn.
- 1972, Jan Carew, The wild coast:
- All these years I been living with you we en't go nowhere. You want a beast of burden, not a woman. Because you is a big, crufty, niggerman with the strength of an ox and a mind big and empty like midday sky you think me is the same.
- 2013, Richard Bowker, The Portal (An Alternative History Novel), page 1614174636:
- I thought I caught him sneering at Kevin and me, in our crufty pants and shoes, but I couldn't be sure.
Derived terms
References
- Peter R. Samson (1959 June) “crufty”, in An Abridged Dictionary of the TMRC Language, first annotated edition, Tech Model Railroad Club of MIT, published 2005, archived from the original on 2007-07-07: “The dictionary has no definition for 'crufty,' a word I didn't hear until some years later.”
- Eric S[teven] Raymond, editor (2003 December 29), “crufty”, in The Jargon File, version 4.4.7.
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