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Definition 2024
Schrödinger's
Schrödinger's
See also: Schrodinger's
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
Schrödinger's (not comparable)
- (humourous) Indicates something or someone whose current state is unknown, mixed or depends on some future action.
- My husband packed the hamper, so until we get to the park, this is Schrödinger's picnic.
- 2003, “Byzantine Fault Tolerance: from Theory to Reality”, in Computer Safety, Reliability, and Security Proceedings, page 240:
- To further illustrate the Byzantine propagation capability, one can envision a "Schrödinger's CRC" similar to the "Copenhagen" misinterpretation of "Schrödinger's Cat" where the CRC is simultaneously correct for any interpretation of Byzantine data.
- 2009, Stef Hall, “Bach, Beethoven, Mozart”, in The Rhinoceros and His Thoughts, page 37:
- While it spun, suspended in freefall, it was all things and nothing, a Schrodinger's coin of possibilities.
- 2011 July 18, Pete Langman, “Chavs, **** and the war of words”, in The Guardian:
- Currently, the word **** is marching its way into its own mutation, and the OED definition is perhaps no longer sufficient. The question is this: when a word is undergoing a metamorphosis, where is its power? Until the battle over its meaning is won, what does it actually mean? Does it exist in a superposition of states, both positive and pejorative? Schrödinger's ****, anyone?
- 2011 October 13, “The Russian Rocket Reaction”, in The Big Bang Theory:
- Until you either do not go or go to Wil Wheaton’s party, you are simultaneously my friend and not my friend. I’m characterizing this phenomenon as Schrödinger's Friendship.
- 2013, Michael R. Underwood, Cerebromancy:
- So let's just go have dinner and see what happens. It's not like a Schrodinger's date with a movie star would be more dangerous than chasing were-suited monsters down alleyways, fighting off feral gnomes with a tanto, or dogfighting through high-rises while desperately trying not to look down.
- 2014, Jess Winfield, “Re-revising Shakespeare”, in Shakespeare and Me: 38 Great Writers, Actors, and Directors on What the Bard Means to Them – and Us, page 193:
- For one private performance only, however, we changed our onstage response to Adam's half-dressed state: “It's Schrödinger's costume change!” I said.