glitch

(Anglais)

Fréquence

C2
Prononcé comme (IPA)
/ɡlɪt͡ʃ/
Étymologie (Anglais)

In summary

Probably from Yiddish גליטש (glitsh), from German glitschig (“slippy”), from glitschen (“to slide, glide, slip”) + -ig (“-y”). Related to gleiten (“glide”). Cognate with French glisser (“to slip, slide, skid”). Popularized in the 1960s, by the US space program. Attested in 1962 by American astronaut John Glenn, in reference to spikes in electrical current.

impulsion parasite

Glitch

glitch

Spannungsspitze

Störimpuls von sehr kurzer Dauer

Störimpuls

μικροβλάβη

bug

Sign in to write sticky notes
External links