nutpick

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English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

nut +‎ pick

Alternative forms[edit]

Noun[edit]

nutpick (plural nutpicks)

  1. (US) A sharp tool used for digging the edible portion out of a nut.
See also[edit]

Etymology 2[edit]

Blend of nut +‎ nitpick. Coined by a commenter and popularized by Kevin Drum in 2006.[1]

Verb[edit]

nutpick (third-person singular simple present nutpicks, present participle nutpicking, simple past and past participle nutpicked)

  1. (Internet) To cherry-pick poor representatives of a viewpoint (i.e., from internet comments) in order to disparage it.
    • 2014 January 29, mistermix, “Notes from Last Night’s Putsch”, in Balloon Juice[2]:
      Nutpicking has gotten easy over the last few years–just check out the Twitter feeds of Teanderthal Members of Congress.
    • [2018 April 23, Nate Silver, Twitter[3]:
      The blog-era term "nutpicking", which refers to cherry-picking the worst or nuttiest comments to disparage a larger group ("liberals", "conservatives", "feminists") by falsely implying the views are widely-held within the group, needs to be revived. It's very common on Twitter.]
    • 2019 March 18, David French, “There’s a Fake Outrage Machine on the Right, Also”, in National Review[4]:
      If there’s a right-wing analog to the Media Matters machine, it often comes in the ongoing effort to “nutpick” radical professors, highlight their most ridiculous (and often years-old) comments, and try to drive them out of their jobs.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kevin Drum (August 11, 2006), “Nutpicking”, in Washington Monthly[1]

Anagrams[edit]