Etymology of Zerk and other WTFs
Etymology of Zerk and other WTFs
What is the exact definition of this word? Where does it come from?
I hear it in so many contexts and used in so many different ways. It is like the English 'F' word... everything is Zerkin' this and Zerkin' that--Zerk, Zerk, Zerk!
Like the word 'noob' this is used it is often hard to know how relevant the term is. You are a noob if you are not as high as someone else or if you do something wrong or if they do not like you or if you misspell a word or if you lag or if you like herb tea and not coke ... and let's face it, most of the time the word is used, the noob caller is the noob ... also, noob rhymes with boob, which is always a conversation piece.
Conversation piece *snort*
it is kind of a homonym... by caliber I mean both the size of their characters and the size of their gun barrels...
Anyway, my definition of noob is:
Noob n one who does not reform in automatch parties
As for Zerk, not the archer Berzerker Arrow either, which is called Zerk too... which can be confusing as well.
So what gives? Which of you noobs Zerks?
I hear it in so many contexts and used in so many different ways. It is like the English 'F' word... everything is Zerkin' this and Zerkin' that--Zerk, Zerk, Zerk!
Like the word 'noob' this is used it is often hard to know how relevant the term is. You are a noob if you are not as high as someone else or if you do something wrong or if they do not like you or if you misspell a word or if you lag or if you like herb tea and not coke ... and let's face it, most of the time the word is used, the noob caller is the noob ... also, noob rhymes with boob, which is always a conversation piece.
Conversation piece *snort*
it is kind of a homonym... by caliber I mean both the size of their characters and the size of their gun barrels...
Anyway, my definition of noob is:
Noob n one who does not reform in automatch parties
As for Zerk, not the archer Berzerker Arrow either, which is called Zerk too... which can be confusing as well.
So what gives? Which of you noobs Zerks?
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Blackchocob0 wrote:Lol sweet answer. Way to reply with some history heh heh. No that's not what she was asking though.![]()
I think zerk means berzerk. As in the red bar on the top left of screen. That you click and your char goes all red and aggro and shit.
i agree with black zerk i think means berzerk
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Awww, you all are no fun. I am just being silly... I will avoid irony and sarcasm in the future
The word is used in a disparaging sense now on my server. If you Zerk, you are being unfair and unsportsmanlike. It is a put down in most contexts. It is almost a curse now.
I have even heard guilds referred to as a bunch of F'ing Zerkers...
Funny how a legal game mechanic can elicit such emotion.
Anyway
Great answer
The word is used in a disparaging sense now on my server. If you Zerk, you are being unfair and unsportsmanlike. It is a put down in most contexts. It is almost a curse now.
I have even heard guilds referred to as a bunch of F'ing Zerkers...
Funny how a legal game mechanic can elicit such emotion.
Anyway
spins wrote:berserkers were norse/viking wariors that ate mushrooms and fought like demons.
Great answer
- Bulletduster
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ginny wrote:Awww, you all are no fun. I am just being silly... I will avoid irony and sarcasm in the future
The word is used in a disparaging sense now on my server. If you Zerk, you are being unfair and unsportsmanlike.
What about when 3 people are coming to nuke you? (Don't say run
Well if it's there, then it should be used
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niffnoff
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#Bulletduster wrote:ginny wrote:Awww, you all are no fun. I am just being silly... I will avoid irony and sarcasm in the future
The word is used in a disparaging sense now on my server. If you Zerk, you are being unfair and unsportsmanlike.
What about when 3 people are coming to nuke you? (Don't say run)
Well if it's there, then it should be used
since we cant use run we need to find some thing hells i know GRASS WALK LVL 9 and walk?
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cl0aked
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Wikipedia wrote:The term berserker comes from Old Norse berserkr (plural berserkir), meaning "bare of shirt", meaning a warrior fighting without armor (debated), or "bear shirt", alluding to wearing clothing made of bear fur.
Some berserks also took names with bjørn in them in reference to a bear. The pre-battle ritual of the berserker included ritualistic group chants and dances, serving to work the warriors into a fighting rage; the rituals also seemed to give the berserkers the feeling of invulnerability, causing them to fight with a reckless disregard for their own safety. It is possible that these rituals also included psychoactives (the most commonly suggested psychoactive being the Amanita muscaria species of mushroom) mixed with mead, allowing the berserker to disregard pain and wounds in battle.
Another supposition about berserkers is that wearing bear or wolf skins served as a symbol of their proclivity for worshipping the spirit of the bear. Siberian and Sámi peoples venerated the bear (see bear worship), although there is no direct evidence of similar veneration in Viking Age Norse culture. Some scholars think that the berserker believed he was "possessed" by the spirit of the bear, having its strength and ferocity, and some sagas even suggest that the berserker could take on the animal's shape and force. In that respect, they are the basis of fantasy characters like Beorn in The Hobbit. A variant form of berserker was the ulfhednar who wore the skin of a wolf.
Hilda Ellis-Davidson draws a parallel between berserkers and the mention by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII in his book De cerimoniis aulae byzantinae ("Book of Ceremonies of the Byzantine court") of a "Gothic Dance" performed by members of his Varangian Guard (Norse warriors working in the service of the Byzantine Empire), who took part wearing animal skins and masks: she believes this may have been connected with berserker rites (Hilda R. Ellis-Davidson. Pagan Scandinavia. NY: Frederick A. Praeger. 1967. p. 100).






