different between golosh vs galosh

golosh

English

Noun

golosh (plural goloshes)

  1. Alternative spelling of galosh

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galosh

English

Etymology

From Middle English galoche, from Old French galoche (shoe with a wooden sole), but further uncertain; three main theories exist:

  • From Vulgar Latin *galopium, from Ancient Greek ?????????? (kalopódion), diminutive of ???????? (kalópous, shoemaker's block), compound of ????? (kâlon, wood) and ???? (poús, foot). More at holt and foot.
  • From Late Latin gallicula, diminutive of Latin gallica (solea) (Gallic (sandal)).
  • From Old French galette (flat round cake), from galet (pebble).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???l??/

Noun

galosh (plural galoshes)

  1. (Britain) A waterproof overshoe used to provide protection from rain or snow.
  2. (US) A waterproof rubber boot, intended to be worn in wet or muddy conditions.

Synonyms

  • (waterproof rubber boot): Wellington boot

Translations

See also

  • rainboot
  • overshoe
  • galoshe, galoche

Verb

galosh (third-person singular simple present galoshes, present participle galoshing, simple past and past participle galoshed)

  1. (intransitive) To walk while wearing, or as if wearing, galoshes; to splash about.
    • 1979, Penelope Mortimer, About Time: An Aspect of Autobiography (page 36)
      My mother, at the age of seventeen, took them on single-handed, galoshing her way through the mud with bundles of tracts, not necessarily religious but always uplifting, and generous supplies of calves' foot jelly.

References

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