Kibitzer

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A kibitzer is a non-participant person, offering (often unwanted) advice or commentary. This Yiddish term is used in Contract bridge, chess, Go, and many other games.

Kibitz is also a term referring to circular commenting. One person comments, then the other person comments. A back-and-forth conversation outside the main issue, where the people having the conversation are not directly participating.[clarification needed][citation needed]

In computer science the term is the title of a programming language[1] released by NIST, as a sub-project of the Expect programming language, that allows two users to share one shell session, taking turns typing one after another.

There is a 1930 film called The Kibitzer[2] which is based on the 1929 three-act comedy play by the same name.[3]

Jane Jacobs describes a kibitzer as someone who keeps a look-out on a street, and seeing suspicious activity, intervenes to help the victim. In this way, kibitzers help keep streets safe.[4]

References

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  1. kibitz man page from expect.sourceforge.net
  2. The Kibitzer (1930)
  3. Rico's End: A Short Biography of Edward G. Robinson
  4. The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs