Doofus

来自Big Physics
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google

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1960s: perhaps an alteration of goofus, or from Scots doof ‘dolt’.


Ety img doofus.png

wiktionary

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Perhaps an alteration of earlier goofus (first attested in the 1920s), due to influence from Scots doof(“simpleton”). Scots doof is derived from Low German doof(“deaf”), which has a secondary sense: "idiotic". The Low Saxon word is cognate with English deaf.

Some have proposed that perhaps dupe played some kind of role in the development of doofus as well.

Goofus appears to be a fanciful extension of  goof, perhaps taking its ending from  ignoramus.  Goof likely originated as an alteration of the (now obsolete) English  goff ("a clown")—compare English  geek, which originated as an alteration of  geck ("simpleton")—but any of its history prior to that is up for debate, and difficult to precisely trace. 


etymonline

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doofus (n.)

student slang, "dolt, idiot, nerd," by 1960s. "Dictionary of American Slang" says "probably related to doo-doo and goofus."