Quackprepr Official
Example: “Don’t quackprepr the quarterly report. We need real numbers, not laminated motivational geese.” A sudden cry of alarm when something both ridiculous and urgent occurs.
His assistant whispered, “The projector is melting.” quackprepr
( n., v., & interj. ) Pronunciation: /ˈkwakˌprɛpɚ/ Etymology: Unknown. Possibly from 19th-century traveling medicine shows (“quack”) + Latin prepr (“to prepare hastily before disaster”). First recorded in a smuggled ledger from the Isle of Dogs, 1887. As a noun The quackprepr is the frantic ten minutes before a presentation when you realize your slides are in the wrong order, your microphone is dead, and your fly is open. It’s the moment a self-proclaimed expert realizes they are, in fact, a duck in a waistcoat. Example: “He stood backstage in full quackprepr, sweating through his tweed, frantically rewriting his opening joke about synergy.” As a verb To quackprepr means to prepare for a serious situation using absurd, last-minute, or counterfeit methods — like treating a broken leg with essential oils, or debugging code by shouting at the monitor in iambic pentameter. Example: “Don’t quackprepr the quarterly report
“Quackprepr,” Pond muttered, and began to dance. ) Pronunciation: /ˈkwakˌprɛpɚ/ Etymology: Unknown
Here’s an interesting, stylized piece built around the word — a nonsense word that suggests something between a failed spell, a corporate acronym, and a cryptic medical alert. QUACKPREPR An entry from the Dictionary of Lost Utterances (vol. XXIII)