john

[jon] /dʒɒn/
noun, Slang.
1.
a toilet or bathroom.
2.
(sometimes initial capital letter) a fellow; guy.
3.
(sometimes initial capital letter) a prostitute's customer.
Origin
generic use of the proper name

John

[jon] /dʒɒn/
noun
1.
the apostle John, believed to be the author of the fourth Gospel, three Epistles, and the book of Revelation.
3.
(John Lackland) 1167?–1216, king of England 1199–1216; signer of the Magna Carta 1215 (son of Henry II of England).
4.
Augustus Edwin, 1878–1961, British painter and etcher.
5.
Elton (Reginald Kenneth Dwight) born 1947, English rock singer, pianist, and songwriter.
6.
the fourth Gospel.
7.
any of the three Epistles of John: I, II, or III John.
8.
a male given name.
Origin
Middle English John, Johan, Jon < Medieval Latin (h)annēs < Greek Iōánnēs < Hebrew Yōhānān, derivative of Yehōhānān God has been gracious

Barleycorn

[bahr-lee-kawrn] /ˈbɑr liˌkɔrn/
noun
1.

John I

noun
1.
Saint, died a.d. 526, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 523–526.
2.
("the Great") 1357–1433, king of Portugal 1385–1433.

John II

noun
1.
(Mercurius) died a.d. 535, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 533–535.

John III

noun
1.
(Catelinus) died a.d. 574, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 561–574.
2.
(John Sobieski) 1624–96, king of Poland 1674–96.

John IV

noun
1.
died a.d. 642, pope 640–642.

John V

noun
1.
died a.d. 686, pope 685–686.

John VI

noun
1.
died a.d. 705, Greek ecclesiastic: pope 701–705.

John VII

noun
1.
died a.d. 707, Greek ecclesiastic: pope 705–707.

John VIII

noun
1.
died a.d. 882, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 872–882.

John IX

noun
1.
died a.d. 900, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 898–900.

John X

noun
1.
died a.d. 929? Italian ecclesiastic: pope 914–928.

John XI

noun
1.
died a.d. 936, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 931–936.

John XII

noun
1.
(Octavian) died a.d. 964, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 955–964.

John XIII

noun
1.
died a.d. 972, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 965–972.

John XIV

noun
1.
died a.d. 984, pope 983–984.

John XV

noun
1.
died a.d. 996, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 985–996.

John XVII

noun
1.
(Sicco) died 1003, pope 1003.

John XVIII

noun
1.
(Fasanus) died 1009, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1003–09.

John XIX

noun
1.
died 1032, pope 1024–32.

John XXI

noun
1.
(Petrus Hispanus) died 1277, Portuguese ecclesiastic: pope 1276–77.

John XXII

noun
1.
(Jacques Duèse) c1244–1334, French ecclesiastic: pope 1316–34.

John XXIII

noun
1.
(Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli) 1881–1963, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1958–63.
British Dictionary definitions for john

john

/dʒɒn/
noun
1.
(mainly US & Canadian) a slang word for lavatory (sense 1)
2.
(slang, mainly US) a prostitute's client
3.
(Austral, slang) short for John Hop
Word Origin
C20: special use of the proper name

John

/dʒɒn/
noun
1.
(New Testament)
  1. the apostle John, the son of Zebedee, identified with the author of the fourth Gospel, three epistles, and the book of Revelation. Feast day: Dec 27 or Sept 26
  2. the fourth Gospel
  3. any of three epistles (in full The First, Second, and Third Epistles of John)
3.
known as John Lackland. 1167–1216, king of England (1199–1216); son of Henry II. He succeeded to the throne on the death of his brother Richard I, having previously tried to usurp the throne. War with France led to the loss of most of his French possessions. After his refusal to recognize Stephen Langton as archbishop of Canterbury an interdict was imposed on England (1208–14). In 1215 he was compelled by the barons to grant the Magna Carta
4.
called the Fearless. 1371–1419, duke of Burgundy (1404–19). His attempt to control the mad king Charles VI and his murder of the king's brother led to civil war: assassinated
5.
Augustus (Edwin). 1878–1961, British painter, esp of portraits
6.
Barry born 1945, Welsh Rugby Union footballer: halfback for Wales (1966–72) and the British Lions (1968–71)
7.
Sir Elton (Hercules). original name Reginald Dwight. born 1947, British rock pianist, composer, and singer; his hits include "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" (1973) and "Candle in the Wind 1997" (1997), a tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales
8.
Gwen, sister of Augustus John. 1876–1939, British painter, working in France: noted esp for her portraits of women

barleycorn

/ˈbɑːlɪˌkɔːn/
noun
1.
a grain of barley, or barley itself
2.
an obsolete unit of length equal to one third of an inch

John I

noun
1.
surnamed Tzimisces. 925–976 ad, Byzantine emperor (969–976): extended Byzantine power into Bulgaria and Syria
2.
called the Great. 1357–1433, king of Portugal (1385–1433). He secured independence for Portugal by his victory over Castile (1385) and initiated Portuguese overseas expansion

John II

noun
1.
called the Good. 1319–64, king of France (1350–64): captured by the English at Poitiers (1356) and forced to sign treaties (1360) surrendering SW France to England
2.
called the Perfect. 1455–95, king of Portugal (1481–95): sponsored Portuguese expansion in the New World and reduced the power of the aristocracy
3.
surnamed Casimir Vasa. 1609–72, king of Poland (1648–68), who lost much territory to neighbouring countries: abdicated

John III

noun
1.
1507–57, king of Portugal (1521–57): his reign saw the expansion of the Portuguese empire overseas but the start of economic decline at home
2.
surnamed Sobieski. 1624–96, king of Poland (1674–96). He raised the Turkish siege of Vienna (1683)

John IV

noun
1.
called the Fortunate. 1604–56, king of Portugal (1640–56). As duke of Braganza he led a revolt against Spanish rule and became king: lost most of Portugal's Asian possessions to the Dutch

John VI

noun
1.
?1769–1826, king of Portugal (1816–26): recognized the independence of Brazil (1825)

John XXII

noun
1.
original name Jacques Duèse. ?1244–1334, pope (1316–34), residing at Avignon; involved in a long conflict with the Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV and opposed the Franciscan Spirituals

John XXIII

noun
1.
original name Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli. 1881–1963, pope (1958–63). He promoted ecumenism and world peace and summoned the second Vatican Council (1962–65)
Word Origin and History for john

John

masc. proper name, mid-12c., from Medieval Latin Johannes, from Late Latin Joannes, from Greek Ioannes, from Hebrew Yohanan (longer form y'hohanan) literally "Jehovah has favored," from hanan "he was gracious."

As the name of John the Baptist and John the Evangelist, it was one of the most common Christian given names, and in England by early 14c. it rivaled William in popularity. The Old French form was Jean, but in England its variants Johan, Jehan yielded Jan, Jen (cf. surname Jensen). Welsh form was Ieuan (see Evan), but Ioan was adopted for the Welsh Authorized Version of the Bible, hence frequency of Jones as a Welsh surname.

n.

"toilet," 1932, probably from jakes, used for "toilet" since 15c. Meaning "prostitute's customer" is from 1911, probably from the common, and thus anonymous, name by which they identified themselves. Meaning "policeman" is 1858, from shortening of johndarm, jocular anglicization of gendarme.

barleycorn

n.

late 14c., from barley + corn (n.). Perhaps to distinguish the barley plant or the grain from its products. In Britain and U.S., the grain is used mainly to prepare liquor, hence personification as John Barleycorn (1620) in popular ballad, and many now-obsolete figures of speech, e.g. to wear a barley cap (16c.) "to be drunk."

Slang definitions & phrases for john

john 1

noun

A toilet; can: I made a brief visit to the john

[1930s+; probably an amusing euphemism for jack or jakes, 16th-century terms for toilet; some say fr Sir John Harington (1561–1612), who originated a form of water closet, but evidence for the attribution is lacking; cuzjohn, ''cousin john,'' in the same sense is found in 1735]


john 2

noun

An Army lieutenant (WWII Army)

Related Terms

first john


john

noun
  1. Any man; an average man; joe: We don't want no poor johns on here (1920s+ Black)
  2. A man regarded as an easy victim, a potential easy sale, etc: He's pretty smart at figurin' out what a John'll pay (1946+)
  3. An Army recruit (1940s+ Army)
  4. A man who keeps a girl; daddy, sugar daddy (1950s+)
  5. (also johnson) A prostitute's customer: even for girls turning their first tricks, pulling their first real John/ shot an 18-year-old hooker then plugged a john who was present (1911+ Prostitutes)
  6. An older homosexual male who keeps a younger one (1950s+ Homosexuals)
  7. john law
Related Terms

big john, dear john, square john


john in the Bible

(1.) One who, with Annas and Caiaphas, sat in judgment on the apostles Peter and John (Acts 4:6). He was of the kindred of the high priest; otherwise unknown. (2.) The Hebrew name of Mark (q.v.). He is designated by this name in the acts of the Apostles (12:12, 25; 13:5, 13; 15:37). (3.) THE APOSTLE, brother of James the "Greater" (Matt. 4:21; 10:2; Mark 1:19; 3:17; 10:35). He was one, probably the younger, of the sons of Zebedee (Matt. 4:21) and Salome (Matt. 27:56; comp. Mark 15:40), and was born at Bethsaida. His father was apparently a man of some wealth (comp. Mark 1:20; Luke 5:3; John 19:27). He was doubtless trained in all that constituted the ordinary education of Jewish youth. When he grew up he followed the occupation of a fisherman on the Lake of Galilee. When John the Baptist began his ministry in the wilderness of Judea, John, with many others, gathered round him, and was deeply influenced by his teaching. There he heard the announcement, "Behold the Lamb of God," and forthwith, on the invitation of Jesus, became a disciple and ranked among his followers (John 1:36, 37) for a time. He and his brother then returned to their former avocation, for how long is uncertain. Jesus again called them (Matt. 4: 21; Luke 5:1-11), and now they left all and permanently attached themselves to the company of his disciples. He became one of the innermost circle (Mark 5:37; Matt. 17:1; 26:37; Mark 13:3). He was the disciple whom Jesus loved. In zeal and intensity of character he was a "Boanerges" (Mark 3:17). This spirit once and again broke out (Matt. 20:20-24; Mark 10:35-41; Luke 9:49, 54). At the betrayal he and Peter follow Christ afar off, while the others betake themselves to hasty flight (John 18:15). At the trial he follows Christ into the council chamber, and thence to the praetorium (18:16, 19, 28) and to the place of crucifixion (19:26, 27). To him and Peter, Mary first conveys tidings of the resurrection (20:2), and they are the first to go and see what her strange words mean. After the resurrection he and Peter again return to the Sea of Galilee, where the Lord reveals himself to them (21:1, 7). We find Peter and John frequently after this together (Acts 3:1; 4:13). John remained apparently in Jerusalem as the leader of the church there (Acts 15:6; Gal. 2:9). His subsequent history is unrecorded. He was not there, however, at the time of Paul's last visit (Acts 21:15-40). He appears to have retired to Ephesus, but at what time is unknown. The seven churches of Asia were the objects of his special care (Rev. 1:11). He suffered under persecution, and was banished to Patmos (1:9); whence he again returned to Ephesus, where he died, probably about A.D. 98, having outlived all or nearly all the friends and companions even of his maturer years. There are many interesting traditions regarding John during his residence at Ephesus, but these cannot claim the character of historical truth.

Encyclopedia Article for john

John V

duke of Brittany from 1399, whose clever reversals in the Hundred Years' War and in French domestic conflicts served to strengthen his duchy.

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John VI

prince regent of Portugal from 1799 to 1816, and king from 1816 to 1826, whose reign saw the revolutionary struggle in France, the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal (during which he established his court in Brazil), and the implantation of representative government in both Portugal and Brazil.

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John VII

pope from 705 to 707.

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John XII

original name Ottaviano, English Octavian pope from 955 to 964.

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John XXI

pope from 1276 to 1277, one of the most scholarly pontiffs in papal history.

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