gadget

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Unknown. First used in print by Robert Brown in 1886 (see quote in definition section). Might come from French gâchette or gagée. Compare Finnish koje (instrument, device).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɡædʒɪt/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ædʒɪt

Noun

gadget (plural gadgets)

  1. (obsolete) A thing whose name cannot be remembered; thingamajig, doohickey.
    • 1886, Robert Brown, Spunyard and Spindrift, A Sailor Boy's Log of a Voyage Out and Home in a China Tea-clipper:
      Then the names of all the other things on board a ship! I don't know half of them yet; even the sailors forget at times, and if the exact name of anything they want happens to slip from their memory, they call it a chicken-fixing, or a gadjet, or a timmey-noggy, or a wim-wom—just pro tem., you know.
  2. Any device or machine, especially one whose name cannot be recalled. Often either clever or complicated.
    He bought a neat new gadget for shredding potatoes.
    That's quite a lot of gadgets you have collected. Do you use any of them?
  3. (slang) Any consumer electronics product.
  4. (computing) A sequence of machine code instructions crafted as part of an exploit that attempts to divert execution to a memory location chosen by the attacker.

Synonyms

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Anagrams


French

Etymology

Borrowed from English gadget.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɡa.dʒɛ/

Noun

gadget m (plural gadgets)

  1. gadget

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from English gadget.

Noun

gadget m (invariable)

  1. gadget (small device)

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from English gadget.

Noun

gadget m (plural gadgets)

  1. gadget
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