Network Working Group                                    D. Eastlake 3rd
Request for Comments: 3092                                      Motorola
Category: Informational                                        C. Manros
                                                                  Xerox
                                                             E. Raymond
                                                 Open Source Initiative
                                                           1 April 2001


                          Etymology of "Foo"

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  Approximately 212 RFCs so far, starting with RFC 269, contain the
  terms `foo', `bar', or `foobar' as metasyntactic variables without
  any proper explanation or definition.  This document rectifies that
  deficiency.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction............................................1
  2. Definition and Etymology................................2
  3. Acronyms................................................5
  Appendix...................................................7
  Security Considerations...................................11
  References................................................12
  Authors' Addresses........................................13
  Full Copyright Statement..................................14

1. Introduction

  Approximately 212 RFCs, or about 7% of RFCs issued so far, starting
  with [RFC269], contain the terms `foo', `bar', or `foobar' used as a
  metasyntactic variable without any proper explanation or definition.
  This may seem trivial, but a number of newcomers, especially if
  English is not their native language, have had problems in
  understanding the origin of those terms.  This document rectifies
  that deficiency.



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  Section 2 below describes the definition and etymology of these words
  and Section 3 interprets them as acronyms.

  As an Appendix, we include a table of RFC occurrences of these words
  as metasyntactic variables.

2. Definition and Etymology

  bar /bar/ n. [JARGON]

  1. The second metasyntactic variable, after foo and before baz.
     "Suppose we have two functions: FOO and BAR.  FOO calls BAR...."

  2. Often appended to foo to produce foobar.

  foo /foo/

  1. interj.  Term of disgust.

  2. Used very generally as a sample name for absolutely anything, esp.
     programs and files (esp. scratch files).

  3. First on the standard list of metasyntactic variables used in
     syntax examples (bar, baz, qux, quux, corge, grault, garply,
     waldo, fred, plugh, xyzzy, thud). [JARGON]

     When used in connection with `bar' it is generally traced to the
     WW II era Army slang acronym FUBAR (`Fucked Up Beyond All
     Repair'), later modified to foobar.  Early versions of the Jargon
     File [JARGON] interpreted this change as a post-war
     bowdlerization, but it now seems more likely that FUBAR was itself
     a derivative of `foo' perhaps influenced by German `furchtbar'
     (terrible) - `foobar' may actually have been the original form.

     For, it seems, the word `foo' itself had an immediate prewar
     history in comic strips and cartoons.  In the 1938 Warner Brothers
     cartoon directed by Robert Clampett, "The Daffy Doc", a very early
     version of Daffy Duck holds up a sign saying "SILENCE IS FOO!"
     `FOO' and `BAR' also occurred in Walt Kelly's "Pogo" strips.  The
     earliest documented uses were in the surrealist "Smokey Stover"
     comic strip by Bill Holman about a fireman.  This comic strip
     appeared in various American comics including "Everybody's"
     between about 1930 and 1952.  It frequently included the word
     "FOO" on license plates of cars, in nonsense sayings in the
     background of some frames such as "He who foos last foos best" or
     "Many smoke but foo men chew", and had Smokey say "Where there's
     foo, there's fire".  Bill Holman, the author of the strip, filled
     it with odd jokes and personal contrivances, including other



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


     nonsense phrases such as "Notary Sojac" and "1506 nix nix".
     According to the Warner Brothers Cartoon Companion [WBCC] Holman
     claimed to have found the word "foo" on the bottom of a Chinese
     figurine.  This is plausible; Chinese statuettes often have
     apotropaic inscriptions, and this may have been the Chinese word
     `fu' (sometimes transliterated `foo'), which can mean "happiness"
     when spoken with the proper tone (the lion-dog guardians flanking
     the steps of many Chinese restaurants are properly called "fu
     dogs") [PERS].  English speakers' reception of Holman's `foo'
     nonsense word was undoubtedly influenced by Yiddish `feh' and
     English `fooey' and `fool'. [JARGON, FOLDOC]

     Holman's strip featured a firetruck called the Foomobile that rode
     on two wheels.  The comic strip was tremendously popular in the
     late 1930s, and legend has it that a manufacturer in Indiana even
     produced an operable version of Holman's Foomobile.  According to
     the Encyclopedia of American Comics [EAC], `Foo' fever swept the
     U.S., finding its way into popular songs and generating over 500
     `Foo Clubs.' The fad left `foo' references embedded in popular
     culture (including the couple of appearances in Warner Brothers
     cartoons of 1938-39) but with their origins rapidly forgotten.
     [JARGON]

     One place they are known to have remained live is in the U.S.
     military during the WWII years.  In 1944-45, the term `foo
     fighters' [FF] was in use by radar operators for the kind of
     mysterious or spurious trace that would later be called a UFO (the
     older term resurfaced in popular American usage in 1995 via the
     name of one of the better grunge-rock bands [BFF]).  Informants
     connected the term to the Smokey Stover strip [PERS].

     The U.S. and British militaries frequently swapped slang terms
     during the war.  Period sources reported that `FOO' became a
     semi-legendary subject of WWII British-army graffiti more or less
     equivalent to the American Kilroy [WORDS].  Where British troops
     went, the graffito "FOO was here" or something similar showed up.
     Several slang dictionaries aver that FOO probably came from
     Forward Observation Officer, but this (like the contemporaneous
     "FUBAR") was probably a backronym [JARGON].  Forty years later,
     Paul Dickson's excellent book "Words" [WORDS] traced "Foo" to an
     unspecified British naval magazine in 1946, quoting as follows:

        "Mr. Foo is a mysterious Second World War product, gifted with
        bitter omniscience and sarcasm."

     Earlier versions of the Jargon File suggested the possibility that
     hacker usage actually sprang from "FOO, Lampoons and Parody", the
     title of a comic book first issued in September 1958, a joint



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


     project of Charles and Robert Crumb.  Though Robert Crumb (then in
     his mid-teens) later became one of the most important and
     influential artists in underground comics, this venture was hardly
     a success; indeed, the brothers later burned most of the existing
     copies in disgust.  The title FOO was featured in large letters on
     the front cover.  However, very few copies of this comic actually
     circulated, and students of Crumb's `oeuvre' have established that
     this title was a reference to the earlier Smokey Stover comics.
     The Crumbs may also have been influenced by a short-lived Canadian
     parody magazine named `Foo' published in 1951-52. [JARGON]

     An old-time member reports that in the 1959 "Dictionary of the
     TMRC Language", compiled at TMRC (the Tech Model Railroad Club at
     MIT) there was an entry for Foo.  The current on-line version, in
     which "Foo" is the only word coded to appear red, has the
     following [TMRC]:

        Foo:  The sacred syllable (FOO MANI PADME HUM); to be spoken
        only when under obligation to commune with the Deity. Our first
        obligation is to keep the Foo Counters turning.

     This definition used Bill Holman's nonsense word, then only two
     decades old and demonstrably still live in popular culture and
     slang, to make a "ha ha only serious" analogy with esoteric
     Tibetan Buddhism.  Today's hackers would find it difficult to
     resist elaborating a joke like that, and it is not likely 1959's
     were any less susceptible. [JARGON]

  4. [EF] Prince Foo was the last ruler of Pheebor and owner of the
     Phee Helm, about 400 years before the reign of Entharion.  When
     Foo was beheaded by someone he called an "eastern fop" from
     Borphee, the glorious age of Pheebor ended, and Borphee rose to
     the prominence it now enjoys.

  5. [OED] A 13th-16th century usage for the devil or any other enemy.
     The earliest citation it gives is from the year 1366, Chaucer A B
     C (84): "Lat not our alder foo [devil] make his bobance [boast]".
     Chaucer's "Foo" is probably related to modern English "foe".

  6. Rare species of dog.

     A spitz-type dog discovered to exist after having long been
     considered extinct, the Chinese Foo Dog, or Sacred Dog of
     Sinkiang, may have originated through a crossing of Northern
     European hunting dogs and the ancient Chow Chow from Mongolia or
     be the missing link between the Chinese Wolf and the Chow Chow.
     It probably derives its name from foochow, of the kind or style




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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


     prevalent in Foochow, of or from the city of Foochow (now Minhow)
     in southeast China. [DOG]

  foobar n.

     [JARGON] A widely used metasyntactic variable; see foo for
     etymology.  Probably originally propagated through DECsystem
     manuals by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1960s and early
     1970s; confirmed sightings there go back to 1972.  Hackers do not
     generally use this to mean FUBAR in either the slang or jargon
     sense.  It has been plausibly suggested that "foobar" spread among
     early computer engineers partly because of FUBAR and partly
     because "foo bar" parses in electronics techspeak as an inverted
     foo signal.

  foo-fighter n.

     World War II term for Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) noted by
     both German and British military.  See [FF] and entry above for
     "foo".

3. Acronyms

  The following information is derived primarily from the compilations
  at University Cork College <http://www.ucc.ie/acronyms> and Acronym
  Finder <http://www.AcronymFinder.com> generally filtered for computer
  usage.

  .bar:

     Generic file extension which is not meant to imply anything about
     the file type.

  BAR:

     Base Address Register

     Buffer Address Register

  FOO:

     Forward Observation Observer.

     FOO Of Oberlin.  An organization whose name is a recursive
     acronym.  Motto: The FOO, the Proud, the FOO.  See
     <http://cs.oberlin.edu/students/jmankoff/FOO/home.html>.

     File Open for Output.  An NFILE error code [RFC1037].



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  FOOBAR:

     FTP Operation Over Big Address Records [RFC1639].  (Particularly
     appropriate given that the first RFC to use "foo", [RFC269], was
     also about file transfer.)

  FUBAR:

     Failed UniBus Address Register - in a VAX, from Digital Equipment
     Corporation Engineering.

     Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition/Repair - From US Military in
     World War II.  Sometimes sanitized to "Fouled Up ...".

  FUBARD - Past tense of FUBAR.




































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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


Appendix

  Below is a table of RFC occurrences of these words as metasyntactic
  variables.  (This excludes other uses that are reasonably clear like
  "vertical bar" or "bar BoF".)  Many of these uses are for example
  domain names.  That usage may decrease with the specification in [RFC
  2606] of a Best Current Practice for example domain names.

  +------+-----+-----+---------+-------+-----+
  | RFC# | bar | foo | foo.bar | fubar |  #  |
  |      |     |     | foobar  |       |     |
  +------+-----+-----+---------+-------+-----+
  |  269 |  X  |  X  |         |       |   1 |
  |  441 |  X  |  X  |         |       |   2 |
  |  614 |     |  X  |         |       |   3 |
  |  686 |     |  X  |         |       |   4 |
  |  691 |     |  X  |         |       |   5 |
  |  733 |  X  |  X  |         |       |   6 |
  |  742 |     |  X  |         |       |   7 |
  |  743 |  X  |  X  |         |       |   8 |
  |  756 |     |  X  |         |       |   9 |
  |  765 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  10 |
  |  772 |  X  |  X  |         |   X   |  11 |
  |  775 |     |     |    X    |       |  12 |
  |  780 |  X  |  X  |         |   X   |  13 |
  |  788 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  14 |
  |  810 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  15 |
  |  819 |     |  X  |         |       |  16 |
  |  821 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  17 |
  |  822 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  18 |
  |  882 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  19 |
  |  883 |     |  X  |         |       |  20 |
  |  897 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  21 |
  |  913 |     |  X  |         |       |  22 |
  |  921 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  23 |
  |  934 |     |  X  |         |       |  24 |
  |  952 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  25 |
  |  959 |     |     |    X    |       |  26 |
  |  976 |     |     |    X    |       |  27 |
  |  977 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  28 |
  |  987 |     |     |    X    |       |  29 |
  | 1013 |     |  X  |         |       |  30 |
  | 1033 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  31 |
  | 1035 |     |  X  |         |       |  32 |
  | 1037 |     |  X  |         |       |  33 |
  | 1056 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  34 |
  | 1068 |     |  X  |         |       |  35 |
  | 1137 |     |     |    X    |       |  36 |



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  | 1138 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  37 |
  | 1148 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  38 |
  | 1173 |     |     |    X    |       |  39 |
  | 1176 |     |     |    X    |       |  40 |
  | 1186 |     |  X  |         |       |  41 |
  | 1194 |     |  X  |         |       |  42 |
  | 1196 |     |  X  |         |       |  43 |
  | 1203 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  44 |
  | 1288 |     |  X  |         |       |  45 |
  | 1291 |     |  X  |         |       |  46 |
  | 1309 |     |  X  |         |       |  47 |
  | 1327 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  48 |
  | 1341 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  49 |
  | 1343 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  50 |
  | 1344 |     |  X  |         |       |  51 |
  | 1348 |     |     |    X    |       |  52 |
  | 1386 |     |  X  |         |       |  53 |
  | 1408 |     |  X  |         |       |  54 |
  | 1411 |     |  X  |         |       |  55 |
  | 1412 |     |  X  |         |       |  56 |
  | 1459 |  X  |  X  |    X    |   X   |  57 |
  | 1480 |     |  X  |         |       |  58 |
  | 1505 |     |  X  |         |       |  59 |
  | 1519 |     |  X  |         |       |  60 |
  | 1521 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  61 |
  | 1523 |     |  X  |         |       |  62 |
  | 1524 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  63 |
  | 1526 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  64 |
  | 1535 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  65 |
  | 1536 |  X  |     |    X    |       |  66 |
  | 1537 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  67 |
  | 1563 |     |  X  |         |       |  68 |
  | 1564 |     |     |    X    |       |  69 |
  | 1572 |     |  X  |         |       |  70 |
  | 1573 |     |  X  |         |       |  71 |
  | 1622 |     |  X  |         |       |  72 |
  | 1635 |     |     |    X    |       |  73 |
  | 1636 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  74 |
  | 1642 |     |  X  |         |       |  75 |
  | 1645 |     |     |    X    |       |  76 |
  | 1649 |     |  X  |         |       |  77 |
  | 1664 |     |     |    X    |       |  78 |
  | 1681 |     |     |    X    |       |  79 |
  | 1697 |     |  X  |         |       |  80 |
  | 1716 |     |  X  |         |       |  81 |
  | 1718 |     |  X  |         |       |  82 |
  | 1730 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       |  83 |
  | 1734 |     |     |    X    |       |  84 |



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RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  | 1738 |     |  X  |         |       |  85 |
  | 1783 |     |     |    X    |       |  86 |
  | 1784 |     |     |    X    |       |  87 |
  | 1786 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  88 |
  | 1813 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  89 |
  | 1835 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  90 |
  | 1856 |     |     |    X    |       |  91 |
  | 1861 |     |     |    X    |       |  92 |
  | 1866 |     |  X  |         |       |  93 |
  | 1894 |     |     |    X    |       |  94 |
  | 1896 |     |  X  |         |       |  95 |
  | 1898 |     |  X  |         |       |  96 |
  | 1913 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  97 |
  | 1945 |  X  |  X  |         |       |  98 |
  | 1985 |     |  X  |    X    |       |  99 |
  | 2015 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 100 |
  | 2017 |     |  X  |         |       | 101 |
  | 2033 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 102 |
  | 2045 |     |     |    X    |       | 103 |
  | 2046 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 104 |
  | 2049 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 105 |
  | 2055 |     |  X  |         |       | 106 |
  | 2060 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 107 |
  | 2065 |     |  X  |         |       | 108 |
  | 2068 |     |     |    X    |       | 109 |
  | 2071 |     |  X  |         |       | 110 |
  | 2088 |     |     |    X    |       | 111 |
  | 2109 |     |  X  |         |       | 112 |
  | 2110 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 113 |
  | 2111 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 114 |
  | 2141 |     |  X  |         |       | 115 |
  | 2150 |     |  X  |         |       | 116 |
  | 2152 |     |  X  |         |       | 117 |
  | 2156 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 118 |
  | 2163 |     |     |    X    |       | 119 |
  | 2167 |     |     |    X    |       | 120 |
  | 2168 |     |     |    X    |       | 121 |
  | 2169 |     |     |    X    |       | 122 |
  | 2180 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 123 |
  | 2193 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 124 |
  | 2224 |     |  X  |         |       | 125 |
  | 2227 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 126 |
  | 2233 |     |  X  |         |       | 127 |
  | 2234 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 128 |
  | 2243 |     |  X  |         |       | 129 |
  | 2255 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 130 |
  | 2280 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 131 |
  | 2295 |     |  X  |         |       | 132 |



Eastlake, et al.             Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  | 2302 |     |  X  |         |       | 133 |
  | 2311 |  X  |     |         |       | 134 |
  | 2326 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 135 |
  | 2342 |     |  X  |         |       | 136 |
  | 2348 |     |     |    X    |       | 137 |
  | 2349 |     |     |    X    |       | 138 |
  | 2359 |     |     |    X    |       | 139 |
  | 2369 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 140 |
  | 2378 |     |  X  |         |       | 141 |
  | 2384 |     |     |    X    |       | 142 |
  | 2392 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 143 |
  | 2396 |     |     |    X    |       | 144 |
  | 2401 |     |     |    X    |       | 145 |
  | 2407 |     |     |    X    |       | 146 |
  | 2421 |     |  X  |         |       | 147 |
  | 2425 |     |     |    X    |       | 148 |
  | 2434 |     |  X  |         |       | 149 |
  | 2446 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 150 |
  | 2447 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 151 |
  | 2458 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 152 |
  | 2459 |     |     |    X    |       | 153 |
  | 2476 |     |  X  |         |       | 154 |
  | 2483 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 155 |
  | 2486 |     |  X  |         |       | 156 |
  | 2505 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 157 |
  | 2518 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 158 |
  | 2535 |     |  X  |         |       | 159 |
  | 2538 |     |  X  |         |       | 160 |
  | 2543 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 161 |
  | 2554 |     |     |    X    |       | 162 |
  | 2557 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 163 |
  | 2565 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 164 |
  | 2569 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 165 |
  | 2593 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 166 |
  | 2595 |     |  X  |         |       | 167 |
  | 2608 |     |  X  |         |       | 168 |
  | 2609 |     |  X  |         |       | 169 |
  | 2616 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 170 |
  | 2622 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 171 |
  | 2626 |     |  X  |         |       | 172 |
  | 2633 |  X  |     |         |       | 173 |
  | 2640 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 174 |
  | 2645 |     |     |    X    |       | 175 |
  | 2650 |  X  |     |         |       | 176 |
  | 2659 |     |     |    X    |       | 177 |
  | 2673 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 178 |
  | 2693 |     |  X  |         |       | 179 |
  | 2704 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 180 |



Eastlake, et al.             Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  | 2705 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 181 |
  | 2717 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 182 |
  | 2725 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 183 |
  | 2731 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 184 |
  | 2732 |     |  X  |         |       | 185 |
  | 2782 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 186 |
  | 2803 |     |  X  |         |       | 187 |
  | 2806 |     |  X  |         |       | 188 |
  | 2812 |  X  |  X  |    X    |   X   | 189 |
  | 2818 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 190 |
  | 2828 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 191 |
  | 2830 |  X  |     |         |       | 192 |
  | 2831 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 193 |
  | 2839 |     |  X  |         |       | 194 |
  | 2846 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 195 |
  | 2853 |     |  X  |         |       | 196 |
  | 2863 |     |  X  |         |       | 197 |
  | 2910 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 198 |
  | 2912 |     |  X  |    X    |       | 199 |
  | 2915 |     |  X  |         |       | 200 |
  | 2926 |     |     |    X    |       | 201 |
  | 2942 |     |  X  |         |       | 202 |
  | 2965 |     |  X  |         |       | 203 |
  | 2967 |  X  |  X  |    X    |       | 204 |
  | 2970 |     |  X  |         |       | 205 |
  | 2993 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 206 |
  | 3010 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 207 |
  | 3023 |     |  X  |         |       | 208 |
  | 3028 |     |  X  |         |       | 209 |
  | 3075 |  X  |  X  |         |       | 210 |
  | 3080 |     |  X  |         |       | 211 |
  | 3092 |  X  |  X  |    X    |   X   | 212 |
  +------+-----+-----+---------+-------+-----+
  | RFC# | bar | foo | foo.bar | fubar |  #  |
  |      |     |     | foobar  |       |     |
  +------+-----+-----+---------+-------+-----+

Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.











Eastlake, et al.             Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


References

  [BFF]     "Best of Foo Fighters: Signature Licks", Troy Stetina, Foo
            Fighters, October 2000, Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation,
            ISBN 063401470.

  [DOG]     <http://www.rarebreed.com/breeds/foo/foo.html>.


  [EAC]     "Encyclopedia of American Comics", Ron Goulart, 1990, Facts
            on File.

  [EF]      "Encyclopedia Frobozzica",
            <http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=Prince%20Foo>

  [FF]      Foo Fighters - "The Rainbow Conspiracy", Brad Steiger,
            Sherry Hansen Steiger, December 1998, Kensington Publishing
            Corp., ISBN 1575663635.  - Computer UFO Network
            <http://www.cufon.org> particularly
            <http://www.cufon.org/cufon/foo.htm>.

  [FOLDOC]  "Free On-Line Dictionary Of Computing",
            <http://www.foldoc.org>.

  [JARGON]  The Jargon File.  See <http://www.jargon.org>.  Last
            printed as "The New Hacker's Dictionary", Eric S. Raymond,
            3rd Edition, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-68092-0, 1996.

  [OED]     "The Oxford English Dictionary", J. A. Simpson, 1989,
            Oxford University Press, ISBN 0198611862.

  [PERS]    Personal communications.

  [RFC269]  Brodie, H., "Some Experience with File Transfer", RFC 269,
            December 1971.

  [RFC1037] Greenberg, B. and S. Keene, "NFILE - A File Access
            Protocol", RFC 1037, December 1987.

  [RFC1639] Piscitello, D., "FTP Operation Over Big Address Records
            (FOOBAR)", RFC 1639, June 1994.

  [RFC2606] Eastlake, D. and A. Panitz, "Reserved Top Level DNS Names",
            BCP 32, RFC 2606, June 1999.







Eastlake, et al.             Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


  [TMRC]    The Tech Model Railroad Club (The Model Railroad Club of
            the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Dictionary,
            <http://tmrc-www.mit.edu/dictionary.html>.

  [WBCC]    "Warner Brothers Cartoon Companion",
            <http://members.aol.com/EOCostello/>.

  [WORDS]   "Words", Paul Dickson, ISBN 0-440-52260-7, Dell, 1982.

Authors' Addresses

  The authors of this document are:

  Donald E. Eastlake 3rd
  Motorola
  155 Beaver Street
  Milford, MA 01757 USA

  Phone:  +1 508-261-5434 (w)
          +1 508-634-2066 (h)
  Fax:    +1 508-261-4777 (w)
  EMail:  [email protected]


  Carl-Uno Manros
  Xerox Corporation
  701 Aviation Blvd.
  El Segundo, CA 90245 USA

  Phone:  +1 310-333-8273
  Fax:    +1 310-333-5514
  EMail:  [email protected]


  Eric S. Raymond
  Open Source Initiative
  6 Karen Drive
  Malvern, PA 19355

  Phone:  +1 610-296-5718
  EMail:  [email protected]










Eastlake, et al.             Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3092                   Etymology of "Foo"               1 April 2001


Full Copyright Statement

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  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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Acknowledgement

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Eastlake, et al.             Informational                     [Page 14]