goose

[goos] /gus/
noun, plural geese for 1, 2, 4, 8; gooses for 5–7.
1.
any of numerous wild or domesticated, web-footed swimming birds of the family Anatidae, especially of the genera Anser and Branta, most of which are larger and have a longer neck and legs than the ducks.
2.
the female of this bird, as distinguished from the male, or gander.
3.
the flesh of a goose, used as food.
4.
a silly or foolish person; simpleton.
5.
Slang. a poke between the buttocks to startle.
6.
Informal. anything that energizes, strengthens, or the like:
to give the economy a badly needed goose.
7.
a tailor's smoothing iron with a curved handle.
8.
an obsolete board game played with dice and counters in which a player whose cast falls in a square containing the picture of a goose is allowed to advance double the number of his or her throw.
verb (used with object), goosed, goosing.
9.
Slang. to poke (a person) between the buttocks to startle.
10.
Informal.
  1. to prod or urge to action or an emotional reaction:
    The promise of time off may goose the workers and increase profits.
  2. to strengthen or improve (often followed by up):
    Let's goose up the stew with some wine.
  3. to increase; raise (often followed by up):
    to goose up government loans in weak industries.
  4. to give a spurt of fuel to (a motor) to increase speed.
Idioms, plural geese.
11.
cook someone's goose, Informal. to ruin someone's hopes, plans, chances, etc.:
His goose was cooked when they found the stolen gems in his pocket.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English gose, goos, Old English gōs (plural gēs); cognate with German Gans, Old Norse gās; compare Sanskrit haṅsa, Greek chḗn, Latin ānser
Related forms
gooselike, adjective
Examples from the web for goose
  • Sometimes, all it takes to win the goose war is a fresh approach.
  • Close-up glaring would go and the silliest of goose steps, which strain the knees, might be eased.
  • Online retailers use a variety of incentives to goose holiday traffic, including coupon codes, newsletters and free shipping.
  • goose fat can be rendered in the same way as duck fat.
  • Now the golden goose is dying and the future of tenure is certain, it has none.
  • Maybe so, but other security experts think that goose may yet be cooked.
  • But a more accurate metaphor might be a goose in hunting season, flying though a hail of bullets.
  • Possible extra bonuses are weakness, lack of coordination, heavy sweating and goose bumps.
  • It's clearly a scare tactic to goose companies into securing employee's data.
  • The landscapes and design gave me goose bumps at times.
British Dictionary definitions for goose

goose1

/ɡuːs/
noun (pl) geese (ɡiːs)
1.
any of various web-footed long-necked birds of the family Anatidae: order Anseriformes. They are typically larger and less aquatic than ducks and are gregarious and migratory See also brent goose, barnacle goose, greylag, snow goose related adjective anserine
2.
the female of such a bird, as opposed to the male (gander)
3.
(informal) a silly person
4.
(pl) gooses. a pressing iron with a long curving handle, used esp by tailors
5.
the flesh of the goose, used as food
6.
all his geese are swans, he constantly exaggerates the importance of a person or thing
7.
(informal) cook someone's goose
  1. to spoil someone's plans
  2. to bring about someone's ruin, downfall, etc
8.
kill the goose that lays the golden eggs, to sacrifice future benefits for the sake of momentary present needs See also golden goose
Word Origin
Old English gōs; related to Old Norse gās, Old High German gans, Old Irish gēiss swan, Greek khēn, Sanskrit hainsas

goose2

/ɡuːs/
verb
1.
(transitive) to prod (a person) playfully in the behind
noun (pl) gooses
2.
a playful prod in the behind
Word Origin
C19: from goose1, probably from a comparison with the jabbing of a goose's bill
Word Origin and History for goose
n.

"a large waterfowl proverbially noted, I know not why, for foolishness" [Johnson], Old English gos, from Proto-Germanic *gans- "goose" (cf. Old Frisian gos, Old Norse gas, Old High German gans, German Gans "goose"), from PIE *ghans- (cf. Sanskrit hamsah (masc.), hansi (fem.), "goose, swan;" Greek khen; Latin anser; Polish gęś "goose;" Lithuanian zasis "goose;" Old Irish geiss "swan"), probably imitative of its honking.

Spanish ganso "goose" is from a Germanic source. Loss of "n" sound is normal before "s." Plural form geese is an example of i-mutation.

Meaning "simpleton" is from 1540s. To cook one's goose first attested 1845, of unknown origin; attempts to connect it to Swedish history and Greek fables have been unconvincing. Goose egg "zero" first attested 1866 in baseball slang. The goose that laid the golden egg is from Aesop.

v.

"jab in the rear," c.1880, from goose (n.), possibly from resemblance of the upturned thumb to a goose's beak. Related: Goosed; goosing. In 19c. theatrical slang, to be goosed meant "to be hissed" (by 1818).

Slang definitions & phrases for goose

goose

noun
  1. A rough prod in the anal region: He threatened a goose, and I cringed
  2. A strong verbal prodding: The whole bunch needed a good goose
verb
  1. To prod someone roughly and rudely in the anal region, usually as a coarse and amiable joke: As she was bending over her lab table, a playful lab assistant goosed her (1881+)
  2. To exhort strongly and irritably; goad harshly: and goosed the media into hyping them/ Every once in a while goose it with defense spending (1930s+)
  3. To run an engine at full speed or with spurts of high speed; gun: Vroom-vroom-vroom, he goosed the engine to full-throated life (1940s+)
Related Terms

cook someone's goose, as full of shit as a christmas goose, loose as a goose

[fr the presumed prodding action of an angry goose; influenced by an earlier sense, ''to do the sex act to; screw,'' where the instrument is a tailor's goose, a smoothing iron with a curved handle, found by 1690]


Idioms and Phrases with goose