fuzz

Etymology 1
. Some dictionaries suggest a source; compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. Others, such as Webster's New College Dictionary, suggest a. The Oxford English Dictionary suggests, “Perhaps of the action of blowing away light particles.”

Noun

 * 1) A frizzy mass of hair or fibre.
 * 2) Quality of an image that is unclear; a blurred image.
 * 3)  The random data used in fuzz testing.
 * 4) A distorted sound, especially from an electric guitar or other amplified instrument.
 * 5) A state of befuddlement.
 * 1)  The random data used in fuzz testing.
 * 2) A distorted sound, especially from an electric guitar or other amplified instrument.
 * 3) A state of befuddlement.
 * 1) A state of befuddlement.
 * 1) A state of befuddlement.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: мъх, пух
 * Esperanto: lanugo
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Hawaiian: heu
 * Korean:
 * Maori: kerehunga
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: ,

Verb

 * 1)  To make fuzzy.
 * 2)  To become fuzzy.
 * 3)  To make drunk.
 * 4)  To test a software component by running it on randomly generated input.
 * 5)  To fly off in minute particles with a fizzing sound, like water from hot metal.
 * 1)  To fly off in minute particles with a fizzing sound, like water from hot metal.
 * 1)  To fly off in minute particles with a fizzing sound, like water from hot metal.

Etymology 2
. Godfrey Irwin (1930) suggests a possible connection to, "over-particular", excessive bother.

Noun

 * 1)  The police, or any law enforcement agency.
 * 2) * 2009, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, 0:26:17:
 * Let's get the hell out of here before the fuzz turns up

Translations

 * Basque:
 * Finnish: kytät
 * Russian:, / , , ,
 * Spanish:, , bofia ,