English

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Etymology

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Blend of Windows +‎ doze, suggesting slow performance. First use appears c. 1986. See cite below.

Proper noun

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Windoze

  1. (computing, slang, derogatory) Microsoft Windows.
    • 1986, PC Communications Corporation, PC Magazine, The Independent Guide to IBM-standard Personal Computing · Volume 15, page 85:
      Every point and counterpoint is peppered with derisive terms such as "Windoze," "File Mangler," and "PeeCees."
    • 1997 February 19, ROWE BOBBY S, “Defend yourself against the Windoze Gestapo”, in alt.destroy.microsoft[1] (Usenet):
      I've had it with the Windoze Gestapo. They want to make everyone use Windoze. They have propogandize[sic] the public through computer publications and large newspapers.
    • 2006, Anthony McGowan, Hellbent, page 118:
      My big fear was that they'd use some kind of weirdo operating system, but it turned out just to be Windoze. And not Windoze Millennium, NT, or '98, or even '95, but Windoze 3.1

Translations

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See also

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