<P> A nerd is a person seen as overly intellectual, obsessive, introvert or lacking social skills . Such a person may spend inordinate amounts of time on unpopular, little known, or non-mainstream activities, which are generally either highly technical, abstract, or relating to topics of fiction or fantasy, to the exclusion of more mainstream activities . Additionally, many so - called nerds are described as being shy, quirky, pedantic, and unattractive . </P> <P> Originally derogatory, the term "nerd" was a stereotype, but as with other pejoratives, it has been reclaimed and redefined by some as a term of pride and group identity . </P> <P> The first documented appearance of the word nerd is as the name of a creature in Dr. Seuss's book If I Ran the Zoo (1950), in which the narrator Gerald McGrew claims that he would collect "a Nerkle, a Nerd, and a Seersucker too" for his imaginary zoo . The slang meaning of the term dates to the next year, 1951, when Newsweek magazine reported on its popular use as a synonym for drip or square in Detroit, Michigan . By the early 1960s, usage of the term had spread throughout the United States, and even as far as Scotland . At some point, the word took on connotations of bookishness and social ineptitude . </P> <P> An alternate spelling, as nurd or gnurd, also began to appear in the mid-1960s or early 1970s . Author Philip K. Dick claimed to have coined the "nurd" spelling in 1973, but its first recorded use appeared in a 1965 student publication at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). Oral tradition there holds that the word is derived from knurd (drunk spelled backward), which was used to describe people who studied rather than partied . The term gnurd (spelled with the "g") was in use at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) by 1965 . The term "nurd" was also in use at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as early as 1971 but was used in the context for the proper name of a fictional character in a satirical "news" article . </P>

When did the word nerd come into use