gimmickyoudaoicibaDictYouDict[gimmick 词源字典]
gimmick: [20] Gimmick originally meant ‘dishonest contrivance’ – indeed, in the first known printed reference to it, in George Maine’s and Bruce Grant’s Wise-crack dictionary 1926 (an American publication), it is defined specifically as a ‘device for making a fair game crooked’. The modern sense ‘stratagem for gaining attention’ seems to have come to the fore in the 1940s. The origins of the word are a mystery, although it has been suggested that it began as gimac, an anagram of magic used by conjurers.
[gimmick etymology, gimmick origin, 英语词源]
gimmick (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
1910, American English, perhaps an alteration of gimcrack, or an anagram of magic.
In a hotel at Muscatine, Iowa, the other day I twisted the gimmick attached to the radiator, with the intention of having some heat in my Nova Zemblan booth. ["Domestic Engineering," January 8, 1910]
gimmickry (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
also gimmickery, by 1950, from gimmick + -ry.
gimmicky (adj.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
1948, from gimmick + -y (2).
pemmican (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
1791, from Cree (Algonquian) /pimihka:n/ from /pimihke:w/ "he makes grease," from pimiy "grease, fat." Lean meat, dried, pounded and mixed with congealed fat and ground berries and formed into cakes used on long journeys. Also used figuratively for "extremely condensed thought or matter."