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mungmore about mung

mung


  4  definitions  found 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mung  \Mung\,  n.  [Hind.  m?ng.]  (Bot.) 
  Green  gram,  a  kind  of  pulse  ({Phaseolus  Mungo}),  grown  for 
  food  in  British  India.  --Balfour  (Cyc.  of  India). 
 
  From  WordNet  r  1.6  [wn]: 
 
  mung 
  n  :  erect  bushy  annual  widely  cultivated  in  warm  regions  of 
  India  and  Indonesia  and  United  States  for  forage  and 
  especially  its  edible  seeds;  chief  source  of  bean  sprouts 
  used  in  Chinese  cookery;  sometimes  plaaaced  in  genus 
  Phaseolus  [syn:  {mung  bean},  {green  gram},  {golden  gram}, 
  {Vigna  radiata},  {Phaseolus  aureus}] 
 
  From  Jargon  File  (4.2.3,  23  NOV  2000)  [jargon]: 
 
  mung  /muhng/  vt  [in  1960  at  MIT,  `Mash  Until  No  Good'; 
  sometime  after  that  the  derivation  from  the  {{recursive  acronym}}  `Mung 
  Until  No  Good'  became  standard;  but  see  {munge}]  1.  To  make  changes  to 
  a  file,  esp.  large-scale  and  irrevocable  changes.  See  {BLT}.  2.  To 
  destroy,  usually  accidentally,  occasionally  maliciously.  The  system 
  only  mungs  things  maliciously;  this  is  a  consequence  of  {Finagle's  Law}. 
  See  {scribble},  {mangle},  {trash},  {nuke}.  Reports  from  {Usenet}  suggest 
  that  the  pronunciation  /muhnj/  is  now  usual  in  speech,  but  the  spelling 
  `mung'  is  still  common  in  program  comments  (compare  the  widespread 
  confusion  over  the  proper  spelling  of  {kluge}).  3.  In  the  wake  of  the 
  {spam}  epidemics  of  the  1990s,  mung  is  now  commonly  used  to  describe 
  the  act  of  modifying  an  email  address  in  a  sig  block  in  a  way  that  human 
  beings  can  readily  reverse  but  that  will  fool  an  {address  harvester}. 
  Example:  johnNOSPAMsmith@isp.net.  4.  The  kind  of  beans  the  sprouts 
  of  which  are  used  in  Chinese  food.  (That's  their  real  name!  Mung 
  beans!  Really!) 
 
  Like  many  early  hacker  terms,  this  one  seems  to  have  originated  at 
  {TMRC};  it  was  already  in  use  there  in  1958.  Peter  Samson  (compiler  of 
  the  original  TMRC  lexicon)  thinks  it  may  originally  have  been  onomatopoeic 
  for  the  sound  of  a  relay  spring  contact  being  twanged.  However,  it 
  is  known  that  during  the  World  Wars,  `mung'  was  U.S.  army  slang  for  the 
  ersatz  creamed  chipped  beef  better  known  as  `SOS',  and  it  seems  quite 
  likely  that  the  word  in  fact  goes  back  to  Scots-dialect  {munge}. 
 
 
 
  From  The  Free  On-line  Dictionary  of  Computing  (13  Mar  01)  [foldoc]: 
 
  mung 
 
  /muhng/  (MIT,  1960)  Mash  Until  No  Good. 
 
  Sometime  after  that  the  derivation  from  the  {recursive 
  acronym}  "Mung  Until  No  Good"  became  standard.  1.  To  make 
  changes  to  a  file,  especially  large-scale  and  irrevocable 
  changes. 
 
  See  {BLT}. 
 
  2.  To  destroy,  usually  accidentally,  occasionally  maliciously. 
  The  system  only  mungs  things  maliciously;  this  is  a 
  consequence  of  {Finagle's  Law}. 
 
  See  {scribble},  {mangle},  {trash},  {nuke}. 
 
  Reports  from  {Usenet}  suggest  that  the  pronunciation  /muhnj/ 
  is  now  usual  in  speech,  but  the  spelling  mung"  is  still 
  common  in  program  comments  (compare  the  widespread  confusion 
  over  the  proper  spelling  of  {kluge}). 
 
  3.  The  kind  of  beans  of  which  the  sprouts  are  used  in  Chinese 
  food.  (That's  their  real  name!  Mung  beans!  Really!) 
 
  Like  many  early  hacker  terms,  this  one  seems  to  have 
  originated  at  {TMRC};  it  was  already  in  use  there  in  1958. 
  Peter  Samson  (compiler  of  the  original  TMRC  lexicon)  thinks  it 
  may  originally  have  been  onomatopoeic  for  the  sound  of  a  relay 
  spring  contact  being  twanged.  However,  it  is  known  that 
  during  the  World  Wars,  mung"  was  army  slang  for  the  ersatz 
  creamed  chipped  beef  better  known  as  "SOS". 
 
  [{Jargon  File}] 
 
  (1994-12-02) 
 
 




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