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The Origins of the Term SCI-FI
sci-fi (sI - fI) - n. Informal pl.
sci-·fis. Science fiction. adj. Of, relating to,
being, or similar to science fiction: a sci-fi movie; a
sci-fi weapons system.

The origins of the word sci-fi
We hear the word sci-fi all the time (almost everyone gets
the SCIFI Channel these days, even this site has sci-fi in
its name). But before 1954 no one ever heard the word. Most
people don't even know how or when the term came into use.
The term was coined in 1954 by Forrest J Ackerman who was
driving in his car and heard the term HI-FI on the radio and
since science fiction had been on his mind (and the tip of
his tongue) since 1929 when Hugo Gernsback first printed it
in his magazine Science Wonder Stories, FJA came up
with the term -- Sci-Fi.
SF fans had long used the term scientifiction to describe
their favorite genre, but they did not take to the new term
sci-fi. In fact there is still a large group who refused to
deal with anyone who use the bastardization -- sci-fi. (I
came across this myself while working for a web portal known
as Sci-fi Jumpgate).
Many of the original people who showed disdain for the term
eventually grew to embrace the term (such as authors like
Bjo Trimble and Isaac Asimov). Now the term is pretty much
a household word.
Source: Forrest
J Ackerman's Wide Webbed World
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin
Company.

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