Chad (Paper)

Chads are paper particles created when holes are made in a computer punched tape or punch card. Chads were made famous in the highly contentious 2000 presidential election in the United States, where a majority in the U.S. Electoral College was determined in Florida by the counting of punch card ballots. Voters leaving incompletely-punched holes resulted in so-called hanging chads where one or two corners were still attached, or dimpled chads (also known as pregnant chads) where three or four corners were still attached. Chads are actually a normally more mundane and everyday occurrence, every time a person uses a hole punch of any functional or decorative sort produces the paper displaced by the punch - a chad. Chads are also common in any store, where the holes are punched so that merchandise can be hung on pegs or clip strips. Likewise, chads can also be the result of punching holes in any sort of thin material, such as fabric, plastic, or even sheet metal.

Etymology

The origin of the term chad, which first appeared in 1947, is uncertain. The term chad predates the Chadless punch which makes a U-shaped hole and folds the paper rather than punching it out entirely. It is more likely from the Scottish name for river gravel, chad, or the British slang for louse, chat.

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
british army infantry
paracetamol
tylenol
rms olympic
d1g reactor
d2g reactor
great dane
lionel tertis
william primrose
uin
father
mother
nightwish
birth
children of bodom
club deportivo badajoz
latrun
lee haney
pumping iron
childbirth
rocky mountain spotted fever
chiptune
lizzie mcguire
crack intro
eric gill
lazarus long
mother of vinegar
ascetic
omniscient narrator
advent
story within a story
flashback
use of death penalty worldwide
the wise little hen
kazuo ishiguro
ernst rhm
chteau de saumur
fanny coot
casey coot
orphans of the sky
matriarch
tess of the d'urbervilles
matriarchy
morty and ferdie fieldmouse