See also: Gove IPA(key): /ɡəʊv/ Rhymes: -əʊv goaf, goff, goof gove (plural goves) (obsolete) A mow; a rick for hay. 1557 February 13 (Gregorian calendar)...
him out right away. He wouldn’t’ve made it through the door. 2006 October, Goff Morgan, "We Wouldn't've Had To Do It" (poem). wouldna (colloquial) wouldn'ta...
extraordinary, I remember, said Goff. I never saw anything like it. We were watching breathless, as he set himself for a long thin jenny, with the black of all balls...
See also: Goof Perhaps from dialectal English goff (“foolish clown”), from earlier goffe, in which case further etymology is uncertain. Perhaps from Middle...
English Wikipedia has an article on: McGough Wikipedia Gough, McGaugh, McGoff, McKeough Anglicized form of Irish Mac Eochadha. Compare McGeoch, which derives...
said Tetty. We did indeed, said Goff, we retired to the billiard-room, for a game of slosh. splash sloshy By analogy with slash. slosh (plural sloshes)...
with the more common words crook and nanny. crook and nanny (plural crooks and nannies) (often preceded by every) A very small place. 2008, Wes Goff,...
first time, with a Latin Vita. 2005, Thomas Head, Hagiography and the Cult of Saints: The Diocese of Orléans, 800-1200, →ISBN: Jacques LeGoff remarks, 'Hagiography...
down her knickers, hoping to find hairs on her prat." 2005, Sherrie Seibert Goff, The Arms of Quirinus[1], iUniverse, page 135: "My prat was sore from the...
shrugged. "Bah!" he said. "They're of no use to me. Come, Andrew, a word with you upstairs." (expressing contempt): pht, feh, meh, pooh, pshaw, poh, pish;...