English

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Etymology

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From neckbeard +‎ -ed.

Adjective

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neckbearded (not comparable)

  1. Having a neckbeard.
    • 2004 January 26, Robin M. Peguero, “Neckbeards Keep Lowellians Warm”, in The Harvard Crimson:
      Binkley and his blockmates sent an e-mail to Lowell-open over a week ago, challenging all male residents of the House to participate in the competition, a test of endurance, rewarding the last man still neckbearded with the pot of $24 in entrance fees.
    • 2010 February 13, Steve Tilley, “Canada taking its cyber lumps”, in London Free Press:
      Not surprisingly, you could fill a book with the snide remarks flying around the Net - by Canadians! - about everything from the Olympic opening ceremonies (neckbearded slam poet Shane Koyczan was particularly divisive) to the uncooperative Vancouver weather (c'mon guys, it's not B.C.'s fault. Probably.)
    • 2011 June, “5 Online Dating Tips”, in Desire Magazine, page 58:
      Even just a few years ago, the words "online dating" typically conjured up, for most people, an image of a neckbearded guy typing furiously over an IM conversation from his parents' basement.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:neckbearded.