An acronym that is also one of the primary words in the definition. For example, GNU stands for "GNU's Not Unix." Wine means "Wine Is Not an Emulator." See recursion, GNU and Wine.
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| Hacker Slang: recursive acronym |
A hackish (and especially MIT) tradition is to choose acronyms/abbreviations that refer humorously to themselves or to other acronyms/abbreviations. The original of the breed may have been TINT (“TINT Is Not TECO”). The classic examples were two MIT editors called EINE (“EINE Is Not EMACS”) and ZWEI (“ZWEI Was EINE Initially”). More recently, there is a Scheme compiler called LIAR (Liar Imitates Apply Recursively), and GNU (q.v., sense 1) stands for “GNU's Not Unix!” — and a company with the name Cygnus, which expands to “Cygnus, Your GNU Support” (though Cygnus people say this is a backronym). The GNU recursive acronym may have been patterned on XINU, “XINU Is Not Unix” — a particularly nice example because it is a mirror image, a backronym, and a recursive acronym. See also mung, EMACS.
| Wikipedia: Recursive acronym |
A recursive acronym (or occasionally recursive initialism, and sometimes recursive backronym) is an abbreviation that refers to itself in the expression for which it stands. The term was first used in print in April 1986[1].
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In computing, an early tradition in the hacker community (especially at MIT) was to choose acronyms and abbreviations that referred humorously to themselves or to other abbreviations. Perhaps the earliest example in this context, from about 1977 or 1978, is TINT ("TINT Is Not TECO"), an editor for MagicSix. This inspired the two MIT Lisp Machine editors called EINE ("EINE Is Not Emacs") and ZWEI ("ZWEI Was EINE Initially"). These were followed by Richard Stallman's GNU (GNU's not Unix). Many others also include negatives, such as denials that the thing defined is or resembles something else (which the thing defined does in fact resemble or is even derived from).
Noted efforts include:
Recursive acronyms are not limited to computing terminology. For example:
Some companies have been named or renamed in this way:
There are also some organizations that employ recursive acronyms:
Another example is:
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