nugget
English
Etymology
Uncertain. Possibly from a rebracketed alteration of an ingot as a ni(n)got. Alternatively, likely a diminutive of dialectal nug (“lump, block”) + -et.
Pronunciation
- enPR: nŭg'ət, IPA(key): /ˈnʌɡət/
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
nugget (countable and uncountable, plural nuggets)
- (countable) A small, compact chunk or clump.
- a gold nugget
- 1887, Harriet W. Daly, Digging, Squatting, and Pioneering Life in the Northern Territory of South Australia, page 146:
- Rough men brought pickle bottles full of nuggets. Mysterious dirty-looking calico bags were opened, disclosing small quantities of water-worn flaky gold, which had been washed out of the beds of rivers with a cradle.
- (countable) A chicken nugget.
- 2014, Laurie David, The Family Cooks:
- By now, we hope you have said “no” to processed nuggets and fingers. Instead, how about taking some real chicken, tossing it with real eggs, a little tangy mustard, and a crunchy quinoa coating?
- (countable) A tidbit of something valuable.
- a nugget of wisdom
- a nugget of truth
- 2023 July 10, Zachary Woolfe, “Review: Ted Hearne’s Sweet, Sad American Elegy”, in The New York Times:
- As he has in superb works like “The Source” (based on the Afghanistan war logs leaked by Chelsea Manning) and “Sound From the Bench” (which set excerpts from Supreme Court proceedings), Hearne takes these found-text nuggets and gives them music that moves from lushly meditative to frenetic and obsessively repetitive […]
- (countable) A small piece of tasty food, a tidbit.
- (uncountable) A type of boot polish.
- (countable) A bud from the Cannabis sativa plant, especially one that is potent.
- (countable, slang) An inexperienced, newly trained fighter pilot.
- (computing theory) A partial description gleaned from data mining.
- 2002, Data Mining: A Heuristic Approach, (Please provide the book title or journal name), page 93:
- We have previously said that the heuristic algorithms produce good nuggets for most classes and most λ values […]
- (slang, countable) A person with no arms or legs; a basket case.
- (Australia, slang, countable) An item that is typically old and of dubious quality or poor condition.
Derived terms
Descendants
- → Portuguese: nugget
Translations
small chunk or clump
|
chicken nugget — see chicken nugget
small piece of food
type of boot polish
bud of Cannabis plant
partial description gleaned from data mining
Verb
nugget (third-person singular simple present nuggets, present participle nuggetting, simple past and past participle nuggetted)
- To find nuggets (of something valuable)
- 1852, James Bonwick, Notes of a Gold Digger: and Gold Digger's Guide, Melbourne: R. Connebee, page 8:
- The other day, you are told, a fellow nuggetted ten or twenty pounds weight, and, of course, you see no reason why half a hundred weight might not be lying snugly ensconced awaiting the revelations of your pick.
- (slang, Australia, New Zealand) To smear a male's genitals or anus with boot polish or similar substance against his will.
- 2014 June 17, Helen Davidson, “Blackballing and blanket beatings: decades of abuse at defence training school revealed”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- Among the complaints to Dart, “blackballing” or “nuggetting” was the most common form of sexual abuse carried out by recruits, and referred to a boy being forcibly held down “while boot polish, toothpaste or another substance was forcibly smeared on his genitals or anal area, sometimes with a hard brush.”
Further reading
- Jonathon Green (2024) “nugget v.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang
Portuguese
Quotations
For quotations using this term, see Citations:nugget.
Swedish
References
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