nutpick

English

Etymology 1

nut + pick

Alternative forms

  • nut pick

Noun

nutpick (plural nutpicks)

  1. (US) A sharp tool used for digging the edible portion out of a nut.
See also

Etymology 2

Blend of nut + nitpick; see nut (crazy person). Coined by a commenter in 2006 and popularized by Kevin Drum.[1]

Verb

nutpick (third-person singular simple present nutpicks, present participle nutpicking, simple past and past participle nutpicked)

  1. (Internet) To cherry-pick poor representatives of a viewpoint (i.e., from Internet postings) in order to disparage it.
    • 2014 January 29, mistermix, “Notes from Last Night’s Putsch”, in Balloon Juice:
      Nutpicking has gotten easy over the last few years–just check out the Twitter feeds of Teanderthal Members of Congress.
    • [2018 April 23, Nate Silver, Twitter:
      The blog-era term "nutpicking", which refers to cherry-picking the worst or nuttiest comments to disparage a larger group ("liberals", "conservatives", "feminists") by falsely implying the views are widely-held within the group, needs to be revived. It's very common on Twitter.]
    • 2019 March 18, David French, “There’s a Fake Outrage Machine on the Right, Also”, in National Review:
      If there’s a right-wing analog to the Media Matters machine, it often comes in the ongoing effort to “nutpick” radical professors, highlight their most ridiculous (and often years-old) comments, and try to drive them out of their jobs.

References

  1. Kevin Drum (2006 August 11) “Nutpicking”, in Washington Monthly

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.