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      • a combining form extracted from cyberpunk used to denote a rebellious, alternative genre or aesthetic in speculative fiction, art, fashion, etc., and added to a word that names its distinctive theme, often a form of technology: steampunk solarpunk hopepunk
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  2. 1. : a usually petty gangster, hoodlum, or ruffian. 2. a. : punk rock. b. : a punk rock musician. c. : one who affects punk styles. 3. a. : a young inexperienced person : beginner, novice. especially : a young man. b. slang : a young man used as a sexual partner by another man especially in a prison. 4.

  3. Aug 26, 2016 · Shakespeare was an early user of the word 'punk', which originally meantfemale prostitute’. According to the Oxford English Dictionary the first recorded usage of the word is in a ballad called ‘Simon The Old Kinge’ composed some time before 1575.

    • Cyberpunk. The granddaddy of them all. This is what started the trend of appending “punk” to various words to describe a new genre. Cyberpunk is characterized by a dark, dystopian vision of the future, where technology and humanity have bled together in a dirty neon melange of corporate oppression and antihero hackers.
    • Steampunk. This genre feels relatively new, particularly with its proliferation online in the last decade. However, the first use of the word to describe a story was recorded in 1987, not long after the birth of cyberpunk.
    • Dieselpunk. This type of sci-fi punk is a product of the 21st century, starting around 2001, although various movies and books have played with the idea for decades.
    • Biopunk. This is the first real offshoot of cyberpunk. The idea of biopunk is to take the dirty dystopia and corporate espionage and focus more on biology than gadgetry.
    • Did Shakespeare Invent The Word?
    • Punks Used to Be Rent Boys
    • The Scottish Have A Claim on The Word, Too
    • Rotten: Now We’Re Getting Somewhere
    • Marlon Brando’s Role
    • Now We Can Start Talking About Music
    • Over to You, New York
    • And Finally, What of Britain?

    William Shakespeare is credited with inventing many words including assassination, manager, scuffle, swagger, and uncomfortable. Did he also come up with punk? Probably not, but the word does appear in All’s Well That Ends Well, which was written in either 1604 or 1605. It appears in Act II, Scene I when the Clown says: As fit as ten groats is for ...

    By the 18th century, a punk was young man kept by an older man for his sexual pleasure. There’s a bawdy song from the era called “The Women’s Complaint to Venus” that features the lines The Beaus too, whom most we rely’don At Night make a punk Of himthat’s first drunk Tho’ unfit for the Sport as John Dryden. Basically, a punk was a bottom whether h...

    As far back as the 1530s, the Scots used the word spunk, which referred to some burning embers or ashes. By the time settlers arrived in Virginia, that the “s” had been dropped and punk (or ponk) was used to describe a bundle of sticks–usually rotten wood–that was used as kindling.

    In the middle 1890s, people were using the word punk to denote someone who was worthless, a young criminal or young hobo. Within a decade, a punk was anyone–usually a young male, though–who appeared to be up to no good.

    In 1953, a young Marlon Brando starred as Johnny Strabler, a young leather-jacketed biker in the movie The Wild One. As the leader of The Black Rebels Motorcycle Club (yes, that’s where the band got their name), he leads his gang through a series of misadventures. Strabler–the kind of dude every parent feared in the 50s–became a cultural icon and s...

    There were a series of garage bands during the 60s that adopted Johnnyt Strabler’s look with the leather jackets and/or tough-guy attitude, most notably The Barbarians (whose drummer had a hook in place of his left hand) and ? and the Mysterians. As far as anyone can tell, Dave Marsh was the first to use the term “punk rock” when writing about the ...

    In 1975, a New York band called The Dictators released an album entitled Go Girl Crazy. An inner photo features the group posing for a photo in a White Castle hamburger store while wearing leather biker jackets. This again reminded people of Brando in The Wild Oneand, inevitably the term punk. You can see why. Around the same time, three fans of th...

    Credit the Ramones. While everyone back home was celebrating the American Bicentennial on July 4, 1976, the Ramones were showing nascent British punks how it was donewith a show at the Roundhouse in London. By the end of that set, punk was off and running.

  4. PUNK definition: 1. a culture popular among young people, especially in the late 1970s, involving opposition to…. Learn more.

  5. What does the word punk mean? There are 12 meanings listed in OED's entry for the word punk , one of which is considered derogatory. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  6. punk. 1. [ puhngk ] Phonetic (Standard)IPA. noun. Slang. something or someone worthless or unimportant. a young ruffian; hoodlum. an inexperienced youth. a young male partner of a gay man. an apprentice, especially in the building trades. Prison Slang. a passive or submissive male inmate, especially one who is used for sex by another male inmate.

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