ENGLISH
REFERENCE

glob

n.
US //ˈɡɫɑb// UK //ɡlˈɒb// glob
Synonyms
Etymology 1

Possibly a blend of blob + gob, or a clipping of globule. An element of sound symbolism is clearly involved: compare such phonetically and semantically similar words as glop, gop, lob, blob, lump, clump and clod. (Still, globe, clump and clod may be related via the Proto-Indo-European root *gel-; compare clew.) In the biological sense, proposed by Bevil R. Conway and Doris Y. Tsao, by analogy with the cytochrome-oxidase "blobs" of V1, an earlier stage in the hierarchical elaboration of colour.

Etymology 2

Originates from the early (c. 1970) Unix command glob; clipping of global.

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