Definition of "trekky"
trekky
adjective
comparative more trekky, superlative most trekky
Quotations
When online, we encounter writing systems and heroic fantasies that come from the past but also from the future, as Snowden describes the trekky fantasy of the NSA chief.
2019, Tarek El-Ariss, Leaks, Hacks, and Scandals: Arab Culture in the Digital Age, Princeton, N.J., Oxford: Princeton University Press, page 178
noun
plural trekkies
Alternative form of Trekkie (“a fan of Star Trek”).
Quotations
Kirk/Spock in the 1970s is said to have been the first such story, involving characters from the Star Trek television series. It was published in a trekky fanzine. (There is also a distinction between groupy fans of Star Trek, known as trekkies, and more serious followers, known as trekkers. Trekkies say that trekkers are trekkies who are ashamed of being trekkies.)
2005, The Spectator, page 24, column 1
What are the most important reasons that you give yourself for spending so much time in trying to get a successful conclusion to your development project? […] x) The future of this community – for the next generation(s) (no I’m not a trekky)
2009, Geoff Fagan, Liberation and Discourse in Community Learning and Development: An Application of Liberational and Discourse Theory to Community Capacity Building Through Non-Formal Learning in Rural Scotland, VDM Verlag Dr. Müller, page 256
When I got to the white-board at five-thirty, ET was there with several computer printouts he had generated concerning random sightings of UFO's over the previous seventy years. He was looking for points of commonality in the hodge-podge of reports, some of which are available only from classified government data banks, and which are very eye-opening, even to a “trekky.”
2015, Karl Hemeyer, Saturn’s Sisters: A Bedtime Story, Lulu