Difference between revisions of "Croggle"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Bot: Automated import of articles)
 
(CanCy almost certainly wrong WO3W active in 1940s; also untenable Eney/Fancy2 would declare this noun. +links)
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
A term invented and developed in the course of three-way correspondence between US fans [[Dean Grennell]], [[Redd Boggs]] and [[Robert Silverberg]] circa late 1940s or early 1950s. [[Dick Eney]]'s [[Fancyclopedia II]] states that 'croggle' combines the words 'crush' & 'goggle', although [[Grennell]] himself says it is a combination of 'crumble' & 'joggle'. [[Eney]] implies it is a noun, one which describes the state of having been "shocked into momentary physical or mental paralysis".
+
To '''''croggle''''' is to amaze and awe or discombobulate and confound (or to go through such a process). '''''Croggled''''' describes the resulting state of mind. The form ''becroggle(d)'', perhaps after ''bewildered'' etc., has also been used.
  
[[Harry Warner, Jr.]], on the other hand, in his ''[[A Wealth of Fable]]'' (first version published 1976, but bear in mind [[Warner]]'s career in fandom began much earlier than [[Eney]]'s) declares 'croggle' "is normally a verb signifying intense disturbance of a subjective nature."
+
The term was invented and developed in the course of the [[WO3W]] [[correspondence]] between [[U.S.]] [[fans]] [[Dean Grennell]], [[Redd Boggs]] and [[Robert Silverberg]] circa early 1950s.  
  
I have always thought of 'croggle' as a verb, as in 'to croggle' somebody, i.e. to startle or stun them to the point of being gobsmacked, with the word 'croggled' better used to describe the resulting state of mind of the victim.  
+
This [[scientificombination]]’s precise etymology was then disputed. [[Dick Eney]]'s ''[[Fancyclopedia II]]'' stated that ''croggle'' combines the words ''crush'' and ''goggle'' (grammar purists will also note he gave definition in terms of adjective/participle, so actually equal to ''croggled'', despite the disparity of the headword ''CROGGLE'' clearly being the infinitive), although Grennell said it is a combination of ''crumble'' and ''joggle''. Silverberg later recalled that it was comprised of ''crush'' and "''boggle'', not ''goggle''".
  
Contributors: [[CanFancyclopedia]]
+
On the other hand [[Harry Warner, Jr.]] in ''[[A Wealth of Fable]]'' (first version 1976, but bear in mind Warner's career in [[fandom]] began much earlier than Eney's; still, both predated ''croggle'') declared ''croggle'' "is normally a verb signifying intense disturbance of a subjective nature."
 
 
[[Silverberg]] later recalled that it was comprised of "crush" and "boggle", not "goggle."
 
  
 
{{fancy2|text=
 
{{fancy2|text=
([[Grennell]]) Roughly meaning shocked into momentary physical or mental paralysis; a portmanteau-word, apparently, combining "crushed" and "goggled", and usually passive or reflexive in application.  
+
([[Dean Grennell|Grennell]]) Roughly meaning shocked into momentary physical or mental paralysis; a portmanteau-word, apparently, combining "crushed" and "goggled", and usually passive or reflexive in application.  
 
}}
 
}}
 +
 +
* See also: [[crottled greeps]] if only for the euphony (but coined by Grennell 1953!)
 +
* https://sfdictionary.com/view/441/croggle , with citations, by [[Jesse Sheidlower]] et al.
 +
** https://sfdictionary.com/view/430/croggled
 +
** [https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803095648888 Same termterm] in the venerable ''Oxford Reference''
  
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
[[Category:fanspeak]]
+
{{fanspeak|start=1950s}}

Latest revision as of 17:41, 12 August 2024

To croggle is to amaze and awe or discombobulate and confound (or to go through such a process). Croggled describes the resulting state of mind. The form becroggle(d), perhaps after bewildered etc., has also been used.

The term was invented and developed in the course of the WO3W correspondence between U.S. fans Dean Grennell, Redd Boggs and Robert Silverberg circa early 1950s.

This scientificombination’s precise etymology was then disputed. Dick Eney's Fancyclopedia II stated that croggle combines the words crush and goggle (grammar purists will also note he gave definition in terms of adjective/participle, so actually equal to croggled, despite the disparity of the headword CROGGLE clearly being the infinitive), although Grennell said it is a combination of crumble and joggle. Silverberg later recalled that it was comprised of crush and "boggle, not goggle".

On the other hand Harry Warner, Jr. in A Wealth of Fable (first version 1976, but bear in mind Warner's career in fandom began much earlier than Eney's; still, both predated croggle) declared croggle "is normally a verb signifying intense disturbance of a subjective nature."

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
(Grennell) Roughly meaning shocked into momentary physical or mental paralysis; a portmanteau-word, apparently, combining "crushed" and "goggled", and usually passive or reflexive in application.

Fanspeak 1950s
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc.