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- Glitch is derived from glitsh, Yiddish for slippery place, and from glitshn, meaning to slide, or glide. Glitch was in use in the 1940s by radio announcers to indicate an on-air mistake. By the 1950s, the term had migrated to television, where engineers used glitch to refer to technical problems.
www.smithsonianmag.com/air-space-magazine/just-right-word-180973113/
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Oct 24, 2013 · In 1965, The St. Petersburg Times reported that a glitch ("as technicians call such abnormalities," it clarified) had altered the computer memory inside the U.S. spacecraft Gemini 6. Six years...
- Emily Siner
The persistent glitchiness of HealthCare.gov, the website implementing the Affordable Care Act, has given us much time to ponder that peculiar little word, glitch. As it happens, some new research on the word brings its origin, most likely from Yiddish, into a sharper perspective.
Nov 3, 2015 · According to Google: The word "glitch" was used more widely known in the late 1900s, in the US, of an unknown origin. The original sense was ‘a sudden surge of current,’ hence ‘malfunction, hitch’ in astronautical slang. 'Glitch' has an unknown origin but was more common in the US.
Apparently it began as technical jargon among radio and television engineers, but was popularized and given a broader meaning c. 1962 by the U.S. space program. No more a-c power line "glitches" (horizontal-bar interference)—because camera filaments are operated from a separate d-c source.
Literally, a glitch is a spike or change in voltage in an electrical circuit which takes place when the circuit suddenly has a new load put on it. You have probably noticed a dimming of lights in your home when you turn a switch or start the dryer or the television set.
Glitch was in use in the 1940s by radio announcers to indicate an on-air mistake. By the 1950s, the term had migrated to television, where engineers used glitch to refer to technical problems.
Aug 14, 2024 · Glitch: Meaning and Linguistic Origins. The term “glitch” has an interesting history. It’s believed to come from the Yiddish word glitsh, meaning “slippery place.” However, its exact roots are not clear. This background shows how words change over time, shaping the language we use now.