different between goos vs goon
goos
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?u?z/
Noun
goos
- plural of goo
Verb
goos
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of goo
Cornish
Alternative forms
- goes
Etymology
From Proto-Celtic *waytos, probably ultimately from the root of gwythi (“veins”), see that entry for cognates. Cognate with Breton gwad and Welsh gwaed.
Pronunciation
- (Revived Middle Cornish) IPA(key): [??o?z]
- (Revived Late Cornish) IPA(key): [??u?z]
Noun
goos m (plural gosow)
- blood
- bloodline
Mutation
References
Middle English
Alternative forms
- gosse, goce, gos, gose
Etymology
From Old English g?s
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?o?s/
Noun
goos (plural gese or gece)
- goose (especially a female one)
- The meat or corpse of a goose; a dead goose.
- A fool or idiot.
Related terms
- goselyng
- goshauk
- gossomer
Descendants
- English: goose
- Scots: guse
Somali
Noun
goos ?
- The act of biting
goos From the web:
- what goose
- what goosebumps mean
- what geese eat
- what goose taste like
- what goose means
- what good
- what goose eats
- what goose call to buy
goon
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?u?n/
- Rhymes: -u?n
Etymology 1
Shortened from gooney, from obsolete gony ("simpleton", circa 1580), of unknown origin. Perhaps a familiar term derived from Middle English gone, a variant of gome (“man, person”). Gony was applied by sailors to the albatross and similar big, clumsy birds (circa 1839). Goon first carried the meaning "stupid person" (circa 1921).
- The meaning of "hired thug" (circa 1938) is largely influenced by the comic strip character Alice the Goon from the Popeye series.
- The "fool" sense was reinforced by the popular radio program, The Goon Show, starring Spike Milligan and Peter Sellers.
- The "guard" sense was influenced by both senses 1 and 2, though not by the Goon Show reference, which arose about 10 years after WWII.
Noun
goon (plural goons)
- A thug; a usually muscular henchman with little intelligence (also known as a 'hired goon').
- A fool; someone considered silly, stupid, awkward, or outlandish.
- (ice hockey, derogatory) An enforcer or fighter.
- (Britain, WWII, PoW slang) A German guard in a prisoner-of-war camp.
- (Internet slang) A member of the comedy web site Something Awful.
Derived terms
- goony
- goon baiting
- goon squad
Translations
See also
- goonie
- gooney
- gooney bird
Etymology 2
Perhaps diminutive slang for flagon or from Aboriginal English goom.
Noun
goon (uncountable)
- (Australia, countable, informal) A wine flagon or cask.
- 2009, Stephen Cummings, Will It Be Funny Tomorrow, Billy?: Misadventures in Music, page 11,
- We drank goons of cheap wine.
- 2009, Stephen Cummings, Will It Be Funny Tomorrow, Billy?: Misadventures in Music, page 11,
- (Australia, uncountable, informal) Cheap or inferior cask wine.
- 2010, Patrick Holland, The Mary Smokes Boys, unnumbered page,
- ‘On the night of our school graduation he stole a flagon of goon wine and disappeared into the woods. The police found him the next day asleep on the creek. […] ’
- 2010, Jason Leung, This All Encompassing Trip: Chasing Pearl Jam Around the World, page 384,
- With these instructions, we take turns sipping the wine directly from the bottle on the beach. It?s not the classiest thing to do but the fact that it?s in a bottle already makes it classier than all the boxes of goon we?ve consumed this trip.
- 2011, E.C. McSween, et al., Boganomics: The Science of Things Bogans Like, unnumbered page,
- Red wine was consumed largely by posh folk, white wine meant goon, mention of a Jägerbomb would have sent its father ducking for cover, and ‘sex on the beach’ meant just that.
- 2010, Patrick Holland, The Mary Smokes Boys, unnumbered page,
Synonyms
- box wine
- cask wine
Anagrams
- gono-, no go, no-go, nogo, noog, ongo
Esperanto
Noun
goon
- accusative singular of goo
Japanese
Romanization
goon
- R?maji transcription of ???
Middle English
Verb
goon
- Alternative form of gon (“to go”)
Ojibwe
Noun
goon anim (obviative goonan, diminutive goonens, locative gooning, distributive locative goonikaang)
- snow
- Gii-gichi-onzaamiino goon gii-biboonagak.
- There was a lot of snow this winter.
- Gii-gichi-onzaamiino goon gii-biboonagak.
Derived terms
- goonikaa
Related terms
- -aagon-
See also
- zoogipon
References
- The Ojibwe People's Dictionary https://ojibwe.lib.umn.edu/main-entry/goon-na
goon From the web:
- what goonies character am i
- what goon means
- what gooner means
- what goonie am i
- what goonies means
- what goon bag meaning