wug
English
editPronunciation
editEtymology 1
editPseudoword, coined by American psycholinguist Jean Berko Gleason in the 1950s as a word that children taking the test would not have heard before.
Noun
editwug (plural chiefly wugs; see usage notes)
- (linguistics) An imaginary creature resembling a bird, used in the Wug Test to investigate the acquisition of the plural form in English-speaking children.
Usage notes
edit- In the original result of the Wug Test, children consistently produced wugs for the plural. However, plurals other than the standard wugs are sometimes used humorously, including wuggen (by analogy with oxen), weeg, and wuggi (by analogy with Latinate plurals).
- Other humorous forms include weese, wüge, nyug or wugim which are formed with the plural markers of other languages.
Derived terms
editEtymology 2
editNoun
editwug (plural wugs)
- (anthropology) In folk taxonomy, a creature with worm or insect features; colloquially, a bug or creepy-crawly.[1]
References
edit- ^ Brown, Cecil. H. (1979). "Folk Zoological Life-Forms: Their Universality and Growth". American Anthropologist. 813 (4): 791–812.