soylent
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of soy + lentil, coined in Harry Harrison's 1966 Make Room! Make Room!
Noun
[edit]soylent (uncountable)
- An undesirable, lackluster, and artificial foodstuff, as a substitute for real meat.
- 1966, Harry Harrison, Make Room! Make Room![1], published 1973, →ISBN, →OL, page 26:
- The soylent steaks were sitting like lead in his stomach and twice he had to go back to the dark and miserable toilet in the rear of the building.
- 1976, Roger C. Pfaffenberger, Mathematical Programming for Economics and Business, Ames: Iowa State University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN:
- It is decided that the product will be composed of three elements — soylent green, red, and blue. Each pound of the final product must contain at least 2000 calories of energy and 1000 units of vitamins.
- 2008, Shane Berryhill, Chance Fortune and the Outlaws[2], New York: Starscape, published 2011, chapter 8:
- “Today's selection is Superaide with a choice of soylent yellow or soylent red,” the servodroid said.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]undesirable artificial foodstuff
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