Sherlock

See also: sherlock

English

Etymology

Supposedly from an Old English scir-lock (bright-lock). One of a group of surnames originally denoting hair colour, parallel to Blacklock, Harlock (Old English har (grey)), Silverlock.

In the computing verb sense, refers to the software Sherlock, which came to replicate some of the features of an earlier program called Watson.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈʃɜɹ.lɒk/
  • Hyphenation: Sher‧lock

Proper noun

Sherlock

  1. An English surname.
  2. A rare male given name transferred from the surname.
  3. (humorous) A detective (from Sherlock Holmes), especially used ironically to address somebody who has stated the obvious.

Derived terms

Verb

Sherlock (third-person singular simple present Sherlocks, present participle Sherlocking, simple past and past participle Sherlocked)

  1. (informal) To deduce.
    Synonyms: figure out, solve
    • 1921, Eleanor Hallowell Abbott, Rainy Week, E. P Dutton (1921), page 77:
      "Anybody could have Sherlocked at a glance," sniffed young Kennilworth, "that it had been packed by a crazy person!"
    • 1921, C. N. Williamson & A. M. Williamson, The Brightener, Doubleday (1921), page 274:
      But almost at once I told myself that I ought to have Sherlocked the truth the moment this troubled, beautiful being had appeared on deck.
    • 1997, Bharati Mukherjee, Leave It to Me, Fawcett Columbine (1997), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
      He wasn't crew, and he wasn't talent. I Sherlocked that from his clothes: []
    • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:Sherlock.
  2. (informal) To search.
    Synonyms: hunt, seek
    • 1908, The Blue and Gold, Volume 35, page 52:
      That afternoon when the boys were in the field Mr. Frickstad sherlocked around in the tents and under the cots looking for a missing rocking-chair.
    • 1917, The National Provisioner, Volume 56, Part 1, page 33:
      It is reported that Governor McCall will also appoint a committee to investigate the high cost of living, but in the meantime individual investigators have Sherlocked around and their stories would make DeQuincy's Life of an Opium Eater fade into insignificance.
    • 1919, Theatre Magazine, Volumes 29-30, page 24:
      Mlle. Belge's eyes Sherlocked over her chorus until it matched up those curls.
  3. (computing slang) To obsolete a unique feature in third-party software by introducing a similar or identical feature to the OS or a first-party program/app.
    • 2012, "You've been sherlocked", The Economist, 13 July 2012:
      The thing software developers fear most is being "sherlocked".
    • 2013, Alex Hern, "Sherlocked: how Mavericks is making some apps obsolete", The Guardian, 28 October 2013:
      All three developers are in a position common enough that it even has a name in the community. They have been "sherlocked".
    • 2014, Javed Anwer, "WhatsApp CEO mocks Apple for copying features", The Times of India, 3 June 2014:
      Last year, when Apple released iOS 7 it added a feature to the Photo app, allowing users to sort photos on the basis of location and date. Photoworks, a third-party app, too offered same functionality. In response, app developer Stephen Orth tweeted, "I guess my new app just got sherlocked."

Further reading

References

  • Percy Hide Reaney, The Origin of English Surnames, Percy Hide Reaney, Routledge, 1967, p. 235
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