Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction
Order by: alphabetical | chronological ( asc | desc )
| First date | Word | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| 1941 | energy weapon n. (1941) | a weapon that fires a beam of energy; cf. earlier energy gun n. |
| 1941 | fan v. (1941) | to participate in fandom; cf. slightly earlier fanning n. |
| 1941 | fanette n. (1941) | a female fan; = fanne n. |
| 1941 | ferry n. (1941) | a small spacecraft used, esp. on a regular schedule, to transport passengers or cargo over a relatively short distance, as between an orbiting craft and a planetβs surface |
| 1941 | flitter n. (1941) | a small usu. short-range aircraft or spaceship |
| 1941 | hulled adj. (1941) | of a spaceship: having a ruptured hull |
| 1941 | intersystem adj. (1941) | (esp. of transportation or communication) occurring between solar systems |
| 1941 | Kornbluthian adj. (1941) | of, relating to, or characteristic of the writing of Cyril M. Kornbluth |
| 1941 | Loonie n. (1941) | a native or inhabitant of the Moon; = Lunarian n.; Lunite n.; Lunarite n. |
| 1941 | mutation n. (1941) | an organism (occ. a human) that has arisen by genetic mutation; mutant n. |
| 1941 | mutie n. (1941) | = mutant n. |
| 1941 | parking orbit n. (1941) | an orbit around the earth or some other planet from which a space vehicle can be launched farther into space; also, an orbit which is stable and from which visits to the planet surface can conveniently be made |
| 1941 | planetography n. (1941) | the study of the geography or physical features of planets |
| 1941 | problem story n. (1941) | a story concerned primarily with the resolution of a (technical) problem |
| 1941 | prodom n. (1941) | the world of professional writing, in contrast to fan writing or activities |
| 1941 | pseudo-gravitation n. (1941) | = pseudogravity n. |
| 1941 | robotics n. (1941) | the technology or science of the design, construction, operation, and use of robots and similar automatic devices |
| 1941 | space cadet n. (1941) | a trainee spaceman or spacewoman; a young astronaut |
| 1941 | space dinghy n. (1941) | a small spaceship; a lifeboat or shuttle |
| 1941 | space opera n. (1941) | a subgenre of science fiction featuring adventure-driven, extravagantly dramatic plots (often including elements of romance) set in outer space; a subgenre of science fiction which uses stock characters and settings, especially those of Westerns translated into outer space; a work in this genre, regarded as being of an unsophisticated or clichΓ©d type |
| 1941 | space taxi n. (1941) | a small spacecraft designed for short-distance ferrying of passengers |
| 1941 | stunner n. (1941) | = stun gun n. |
| 1941 | suit radio n. (1941) | = suit phone n. |
| 1941 | terrene adj. 2 (1941) | made of matter (as opposed to antimatter); cf. contraterrene adj. |
| 1941 | time-slip n. (1941) | a rift or flaw in the fabric of time that allows travel between two or more periods of time or timelines; any accidental or unexplained movement between periods of time; cf. timequake n., time storm n. |
| 1941 | Uranian n. 2 (1941) | the language of Uranians |
| 1941 | Vestan adj. (1941) | of or relating to the asteroid Vesta or its inhabitants |
| 1941 | zine n. (1941) | = fanzine n. |
| 1940 | BEM n. (1940) | = bug-eyed monster n. |
| 1940 | biotechnician n. (1940) | a person, esp. a laboratory technician, involved in biotechnics or biotechnology |
| 1940 | Chicon n. (1940) | a SF convention held in Chicago, esp. the 1940 Chicago Science Fiction Convention |
| 1940 | completist n. (1940) | one who wishes to have or collect complete sets of something |
| 1940 | countergravity adj. (1940) | = antigravity adj. |
| 1940 | earthborn n. (1940) | a person born on Earth; people born on Earth collectively |
| 1940 | elsewhen adv. (1940) | (in time-travel contexts) at or to another point in time |