Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction
Order by: alphabetical | chronological
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| weird adj. (1923) | describing supernatural horror (often in weird fiction, weird story, etc.) |
| weirdist n. (1936) | an author or fan of weird fiction |
| weird science n. (1927) | a genre that combines elements of weird with science fiction |
| Wellsian n. (1914) | a devotee or follower of H. G. Wells |
| Wellsian adj. (1895) | of, pertaining to, or resembling the ideas and writings of H. G. Wells, esp. in his science fiction, social comment, etc. |
| wetware n. (1963) | biological structures or systems regarded as analogous to computer equipment; (specif.) the human brain; the mind, esp. when able to be affected or altered by computer processes |
| Whoniverse n. (1981) | the fictional universe used as the setting for the British television series Doctor Who; (also) any media, fandom, etc. connected to Doctor Who |
| Whovian n. (1982) | a fan of the British television series Doctor Who |
| widescreen baroque n. (1964) | Brian Aldissβs term for: a subgenre of science fiction characterized by larger-than-life characters, violence, intrigue, extravagant settings or actions, and fast-paced plotting; a form of space opera n. |
| WKF n. (1953) | someone who is moderately prominent within a particular fandom; cf. BNF n. |
| Wookiee n. (1974) | in the fictional universe of the Star Wars franchise: (a member of) a race of tall, hairy, humanoid aliens |
| worldbuilder n. (1892) | a writer who engages in world-building n. |
| world-building n. (1920) | the creation of fictional realms and their geology, geography, biology, etc., often including the history and culture of their inhabitants |
| Worldcon n. (1942) | the annual World Science Fiction Convention |
| worldlet n. (1841) | a small celestial object; a planetoid |
| worm n. (1975) | a program designed to sabotage a computer or computer network; spec. a self-duplicating program which can operate without becoming incorporated into another program |
| wormhole n. (1957) | an interconnection between widely separated regions of space-time, allowing faster-than-light travel between them |
| xeno- prefix (1962) | (used to form words indicating that the base element is or relates to an alien) |
| xenoanthropologist n. (1981) | a person who studies alien cultures; a specialist in xenoanthropology n. |
| xenoanthropology n. (1951) | the study of alien cultures |
| xenobiological adj. (1958) | of or relating to xenobiology n. |
| xenobiologist n. (1954) | a specialist in xenobiology n. |
| xenobiology n. (1954) | the study of the biology of extraterrestrial life forms |
| xenocidal adj. (1979) | of, pertaining to, or involving xenocide n. |
| xenocide n. (1964) | the killing or attempted killing of an entire alien species; the killing of an individual alien; (also) a person who commits this act |
| xenolinguist n. (1955) | a specialist in alien languages |
| xenolinguistics n. (1955) | the study of alien languages |
| xenological adj. (1950) | of, or relating to, xenology |
| xenologist n. (1949) | a person who studies aliens; a specialist in xenology n. |
| xenology n. (1949) | the scientific study of aliens, esp. xenobiology n. |
| xenopsychologist n. (1980) | a specialist in xenopsychology n. |