With computer programming now a part of the language, the temptation is to assign this word to computer lingo, but the sense of program as "routine, pattern, cooperative endeavor" antedates that.
Does this prepare me for a nanosecondary grasp of computer lingo?
Default, dear Brutus, long ago left the legal meaning of "failure to perform an obligation" to leap into computer lingo as "the option selected by a computer when the user is too lazy to choose."
Is there an analogous situation in * A "bit" is short for "binary digit" and is either i or o in computer lingo.
But a "snow crash" is computer lingo.
One is computer lingo.
But adsnow crash" is computer lingo.
In today's computer lingo, off-the-shelf is a modifier that contrasts an item with "custom-made" and means both "available from stock" and "requiring no adaptation (of software)."
I apologize, I don't know all the right computer lingo.