释义 |
[ git ] / gɪt / SEE SYNONYMS FOR git ON THESAURUS.COM
nounBritish Slang. a foolish or contemptible person. Origin of gitFirst recorded in 1945–50; variant of get Words nearby gitGiselle, GI series, Gish, Gissing, gist, git, gitalin, gite, git-go, gitim, Gitmo Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for gitHe is as conversant with HTML and Git as with metaphor and the twists and turns of plotting. Vikram Chandra Is A Novelist Who's Obsessed With Writing Computer Code|Jane Ciabattari|August 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST Ef we hed it naow, mebbe we could git 'long spite o' ther being no money a cirkilatin. The Duke of Stockbridge|Edward Bellamy When I git hum I go an' hide it in the bush somewhars--jest to git it out o' my way. In the Days of Poor Richard|Irving Bacheller Not a bit of it, for Hercules is the only one that knows how to git over such places. A Waif of the Mountains|Edward S. Ellis
Linkin ses "they are like to Paddy's flee, when you git where they are they ain't ther." Letters of Major Jack Downing, of the Downingville Militia|Seba Smith When I did git room to turn around, I went through that whole house pretendin' to take inventories. The House of Mystery|William Henry Irwin
British Dictionary definitions for git
noun British slanga contemptible person, often a fool a bastard Word Origin for gitC20: from get (in the sense: to beget, hence a bastard, fool) Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 Words related to gitblast off, quit, pull out, vacate, retire, evacuate, go, exit, remove, withdraw, escape, abandon, disappear, blow, depart, get off, go out, scoot, scram, shoo |