biorg
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of biological + organism(?), modelled on cyborg, which is from cybernetic + organism.
Noun
[edit]biorg (plural biorgs)
- (neologism, science fiction, rare) A non-human animal cyborg.
- 2018, David Herman, Narratology beyond the Human: Storytelling and Animal Life:
- In this case, the story concerns three pets who have gone missing—a dog named Bandit, a cat named Tinker, and a rabbit named Pirate. These pets have been transformed by the US Air Force into computer-enhanced "biorgs," as part of an army of "efficient animal slaves" designed to take the place of humans […]
- 2020, Sidney I. Dobrin, EcoComix: Essays on the Environment in Comics and Graphic Novels, McFarland, →ISBN, pages 71–72:
- Biorgs are both cyborgs and companion animals, […] Vint's reading of the biorgs' speech underscores how the comic blurs the division between nature and culture as well as between human and non-human animals. The biorgs may not speak exactly like humans, but their speech communicates […] While canine biorgs' speech […]
- 2021, Florence Ashley, "'X' why? Gender Marks and Non-binary Transgender People", in Isabel Cristina Jaramillo Vélez, Laura Carlson (editors), Trans Rights and Wrongs: A Comparative Study of Legal Reform Concerning Trans Persons, Springer Nature (→ISBN), pages 33-34:
- Metaphorically a biorg witch with flowers in her hair, I am presently a doctoral student […]