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  2. Oct 24, 2013 · To complicate things, the origins and etymology of "glitch" are unknown, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. But it seems to first come into the vernacular in the 1960s and '70s —...

    • Emily Siner
  3. Safire thought the term dated from the '60s in aeronautical use, but noted that it "probably originated in the German and Yiddish glitschen, meaning 'slip,' and by extension, 'error.'". Others, such as Leo Rosten in The Joys of Yiddish, have claimed glitch as a Yiddishism.

  4. Nov 3, 2015 · 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.

  5. glitch. (n.) by 1953, said to have been in use in radio broadcast jargon since early 1940s, American English, possibly from Yiddish glitsh "a slip," from glitshn "to slip," from German glitschen, and related gleiten "to glide" (see glide (v.)). Perhaps directly from German.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GlitchGlitch - Wikipedia

    Etymology. Some reference books, including Random House's American Slang, claim that the term comes from the German word glitschen 'to slip' and the Yiddish word glitshn 'to slide, to skid'. Either way, it is a relatively new term.

  7. Where does the verb glitch come from? Earliest known use. 1960s. The earliest known use of the verb glitch is in the 1960s. OED's earliest evidence for glitch is from 1962, in the Washington Post. glitch is apparently formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: glitch n. See etymology. Nearby entries. glistenless, adj. 1854–. glister, n. 1535–.

  8. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › glitchglitch - Wordorigins.org

    Oct 22, 2020 · In English, glitch has the general meaning of a snag or malfunction of some sort. It is borrowed into English from either or both the German glitschen or the Yiddish glitshen, meaning to slip or slide. The earliest example I can find of the word in English is a 19 May 1940 syndicated newspaper column by Katherine Brush:

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