Dalek

Etymology
Coined by Terry Nation in 1963 for his script of The Mutants (later retitled "The Daleks"), the second serial of the first season of Doctor Who. Accounts of how he devised the word vary. Within the Doctor Who universe, the word is supposed to be related to the name of the people from whom the Daleks evolved, either the Kaleds (as according to later serial Genesis of the Daleks) or the Dals (as in The Daleks), or to derive from a word meaning "gods" in their (fictional) language, in which the sacred "Book of Predictions" is written. According to the I, Davros audio fiction the book reads "...and on that day, men will become as gods", with the last word pronounced "Dal-eks".

Noun

 * 1)  A member of a species of extraterrestrial cyborg mutants who appear in the television programme Doctor Who and are known for travelling in metallic shells, having monotone, mechanically distorted voices, repeating a limited number of phrases, and their fanatical obsession with exterminating other, non-Dalek beings.
 * 2) * 1964, David Whitaker, Dr. Who and the Daleks, chapter 6 (based on the film script Dr. Who and the Daleks by Milton Subotsky, based itself on the tele-script The Mutants/The Daleks by Terry Nation):
 * 'But Alydon,' I persisted, 'the Daleks aren't human beings. They're just evil, half creatures, half machines, determined to destroy you.'
 * , Together with English Core, fourteenth edition (Rachna Sagar Pvt. Ltd., ISBN 81-87414-92-8, page 234:
 * This synthesizer is by far the best I have heard, because it varies the intonation, and does not speak like a Dalek.
 * 1) * 2000, Rosie Parnell (Rosie White), The Crit: An Architecture Student's Handbook (co-written with Charles Doidge, Rachel Sara), page xii:
 * My voice still insisted on disappearing into my shoes every time it happened so that I sounded like a Dalek, but with a bit of experience behind me I felt marginally more confident.
 * , Peter Bazalgette, quoted in the Funniest Thing You Never Said: 2, page 333:
 * Gordon Brown sounds like a Dalek with about three stock phrases... Remember, Daleks always want world domination but they always lose.
 * 1)  One who is dogmatic, unfeeling and determined.
 * , Peter Bazalgette, quoted in the Funniest Thing You Never Said: 2, page 333:
 * Gordon Brown sounds like a Dalek with about three stock phrases... Remember, Daleks always want world domination but they always lose.
 * 1)  One who is dogmatic, unfeeling and determined.
 * 1)  One who is dogmatic, unfeeling and determined.

Etymology
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Noun

 * 1)  (all senses)