English edit

Etymology edit

astro- +‎ boffin

Noun edit

astro-boffin (plural astro-boffins)

  1. (UK, Australia, informal) An expert in a field relating to the stars, especially astronomy.
    • 2006 August 19, Jonathan Green, “Know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em”, in The Age:
      Perhaps while confirming the diminution of Pluto's status, the astro-boffins might like to consider a name change for the U-planet.
    • 2007 March 25, Mark Kermode, “2007: a scorching new space odyssey”, in The Observer:
      Space travel turns into a journey to hell. 'I created the Event Horizon to reach the stars!' burbles Sam Neill's astro-boffin. 'But she's gone much further than that - to a dimension of pure chaos, pure evil!'
    • 2008 April 10, Andy McNab, “Let's make-up”, in 4men:
      'The birth of new galaxies' - I'll produce unlimited copy, that'll leave the entire astro-boffin community scratching their heads in disbelief as they're forced to re-evaluate the whole time/space continuum...
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:astroboffin.