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(I) There is no Yiddish, German, or Hebrew word or word combination
apparent to suggest 'patzer'. Seriously, where does Patzer come from?
Patzer is inferior Chess player by definition. Not Irish, is it, like from Paddy? Pat, or Paddy, gives paddy wagon because of so many Irish policemen about in 1900, but that's different line of derivation. Please explain patzer etymology or slang or plain country of origin for certain.
(This ''Nomenclature_Che'' thread, other related issues here for the
cv-savvy can be used liberally to prolong discussion. Examples could be
trigonal/triagonal, or Vao/Canon/Arrow duplicating names for the same
other's recent idea, or any old or new Chess word-topic wanting to be
revisited. Suit yourself.)
(II.) Once explaining Patzer, someone is invited to coin
new word or word combination for ''inferior chess variant designer or design.''
It's only fair. Dis-allowed as too specific-case term to mean
''haphazard/hapless designer,'' are the likes of 'Stanley Randomizer'
or 'Gridlocker' or 'HumpMitregier' or 'Nutty Nighters' or XYMYXer.
Please do not point to a specific cv like all those terms would. So no more or less direct reference possibly slurring someone's honest try. Rather, what would be good general neologism to describe ''inferior cv
design'' -- the needed equivalent to Patzer? Yet too, concise and precise
one or two words would indeed seem best fitting this purpose.
(III) Two questions really then. Main topic, does anyone know PATZER or
not? It is certainly not of Latin Pater either. Then secondly, what is just the right catchy name for 'Patzer Designer'?
Patzer has definitely german relations, there is the verb 'verpatzen' in german, meaning to crab, to mull, to fluff, to foozle, to snafu. I don't know its further etymology, it is quite possible that it is either yiddish oder rotwelsch.
Now I found the time to look up patzen/Patzer in an etymological dictionary. It is a german word; deriving from the common german wird 'Batzen' (lump, chunk, glob; also a historic small coin minted in Switzerland) and showing Bavarian or Austrian spelling (B->P). Batzen is derived from 'Backen' (to bake).
'Patzer' appears in east coast N. American chess circles 100 yrs. ago. Thanks that certainly knowledge of German originated Patzer. Then sealing the meaning is association with English 'patsy' one would think. Albert Einstein would be one of that generation emigrating from Germany, to explain such coinage. Interesting 'snafu', a definition of 'verpatzen', is adopted from initials only c. 1940 Armed Forces use and caught on immediately. Its taboo origin is totally forgetten, so that traffic snafu and pipeline snafus make everyday common parlance. Chess snafu? --See any overcomplex cv design having too many unknowns. F.i.d.e. Orthodox Chess and snafu become synonymous, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2A9m-OB_-fE.
I looked up patsy in the OED, it is attested in 1889, postdating the german use of Patzer. I assosciate the word Patzer to the Viennese coffee house chess culture, where chess master earned money playing against Patzers. It is the age of Steinitz (one generation before Einstein and Lasker) or even ealier.
Ah, and than there is another german word, related but not too close, 'patzig' meaning stroppy, snotty, bolshie. It describes the typical mood of teenagers very well.
Http://www.chess-poster.com/english/notes_and_facts/chess_quotes.htm -- there's Al Einstein on Chess (116, 234), thinking of his friend Emanuel Lasker, contemporary gm and mathematician, Albert consulted on his equations. Fellow German mathematician David Hilbert had the relativity equations ahead of Einstein but shunned the controversy of Newton/Leibniz 225 yrs. earlier. Actually not exclusive theoretician, Einstein got practical lab experience as a kid at his uncle's studio to manufacture electrical equipment in Munich. As a result, he could express better than any abstract mathematician real-world time/force interactions. Physics nomenclature put respectfully into pre-modern CV art: http://www.chessvariants.org/other.dir/physics.html.
'Patt' or stalemate sounds like german Patzer too. So rule out all of paddy, pater and patsy and left is 'verpatzen' fitting sound, meaning, construction and time period. Case closed, and at least one english etymology book consulted is just plain wrong indicating another language. Still up in the air is coinage for the stereotypical 'Patzer-designer'?
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