gozz
English
Verb
gozz (third-person singular simple present gozz, present participle gozzing, simple past and past participle gozzed)
- (Britain) to spit
- 2013, Nick Oldham, Bad Tidings, Severn House Publishers, →ISBN, page 164:
- He had had the privilege of being gozzed on by Johnny Rotten. A night to treasure. He hadn't washed for three days after.
- 2014, Joseph O'Connor, The Thrill of it All, Random House, →ISBN, page 119:
- One of them gozzed at him, which was a thing you'd see at a gig back then. Disgusting I know, but that's the way it was.
- 2018, Roger Smith, Tell Me Why, Troubador Publishing, →ISBN, page 120:
- Unfortunately it quite often sidelined any democratic processes and became an integral part of the general mayhem as some unfortunate misfit of the moment was held down and gozzed on.
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Maltese
Root |
---|
g-z-z |
3 terms |
Alternative forms
- gods (archaic)
Etymology
From Arabic كُدْس (kuds, “heap of grain”). In the original plural أَكْداس (ʔakdās) and in certain forms of the related verb كَدَسَ (kadasa), the -k- was voiced by assimilation to the following -d-, and this voicing was then generalised (as in gideb, gidem etc.). In a second step the cluster -ds- was reanalysed as -zz-, leading to the new plural gzuz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɡɔt͡s/
Related terms
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