bogus








adjective

  1. not genuine; counterfeit; spurious; sham.

noun

  1. Printing, Journalism. matter set, by union requirement, by a compositor and later discarded, duplicating the text of an advertisement for which a plate has been supplied or type set by another publisher.

adjective

  1. spurious or counterfeit; not genuinea bogus note

1838, “counterfeit money, spurious coin,” American English, apparently from a slang word applied (according to some sources first in Ohio in 1827) to a counterfeiter’s apparatus.

One bogus or machine impressing dies on the coin, with a number of dies, engraving tools, bank bill paper, spurious coin, &c. &c. making in all a large wagon load, was taken into possession by the attorney general of Lower Canada. [Niles’ Register, Sept. 7, 1833, quoting from Concord, New Hampshire, “Statesman,” Aug. 24]

Some trace this to tantrabobus, also tantrabogus, a late 18c. colloquial Vermont word for any odd-looking object, in later 19c. use “the devil,” which might be connected to tantarabobs, recorded as a Devonshire name for the devil. Others trace it to the same source as bogey (n.1).

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