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Catchword for “standardista”
Catchword: standardista
Filed under: , ,
Part of speechn.
Quotation: Standardistas have spent years coming up with multicolumn page designs that look nice, render more or less the same in compliant browsers, and (for the keener developers) are also usable to screen readers.…Standardistas were able to stomach the idea that blind people were simply ignoring the appearance of their sites because, self-evidently, they were blind. It was no big deal; nothing happens to your visual design when you accommodate blind people.
Article or document title:
“Big, Stark & Chunky” (URL)
Author:
Joe Clark
Article, document, publication, web site:
A List Apart
Date of publication:
Jan. 11, 2005
This catchword has yet to be researched.
Comments:
My search for "hunky" came back with 2 citations including only a slightly longer word "chunky". For the record the only offering of this catchword to date follows:

Hunky (adj) is an abbreviated form of "hunky dory" and is more often than not masculine since it includes the term "hunk" meaning a healthy, attractive adult man. It is often used in response to questions such as "how are you?", "how are things", "Doing alright?", etc. It might also be used in a sentence such as "I was walking downtown and I'm feeling pretty hunky."

by Leo Albertson 10 May 06, 0319 GMT

This discussion isn't particularly relevant for this cite, but "hunky" meaning "fine, splendid, satisfactory" goes back to at least 1861. "Hunky-dory" dates at least back to 1866. Both dates come from the Historical Dictionary of American Slang, which should be your reference of first-resort for slang words covering the A to O alphabetical range. Also note that this web site is a dictionary of fringe English; as explained on the "about" page, this site focuses on terms not well-covered elsewhere, so there are going to be plenty of common slang terms like "hunky" and "hunky dory" not defined here.
by Grant Barrett 10 May 06, 0326 GMT

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Keep in mind that we're interested in terms that are not well-covered in mainstream dictionaries, or not covered at all. A mass of unexamined Google hits counts for nothing, but an early use of the term you've found in a book or periodical is very useful. A term does not have to be new to be recorded here, it merely needs to be worthy of more attention.
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