goose
- IPA[ɡuːs]
英式
- a large waterbird with a long neck, short legs, webbed feet, and a short broad bill. Generally geese are larger than ducks and have longer necks and shorter bills.;a female goose.
- poke (someone) in the bottom.;give (something) a boost; invigorate
verb: goose, 3rd person present: gooses, gerund or present participle: goosing, past tense: goosed, past participle: goosed
noun: goose, plural noun: geese
- 釋義
- 相關詞
- 片語
名詞
- 1. a large waterbird with a long neck, short legs, webbed feet, and a short broad bill. Generally geese are larger than ducks and have longer necks and shorter bills.
- ▪ a female goose.
- ▪ the flesh of a goose as food.
- 2. informal a foolish person ‘Silly goose,’ he murmured fondly
- 3. a tailor's smoothing iron.
動詞
- 1. poke (someone) in the bottom.
- 2. North American give (something) a boost; invigorate the government's desire to goose the tired housing market
- plural form of goose
Oxford American Dictionary
- plural form of goose
Oxford Dictionary
- a military marching step in which the legs are not bent at the knee.
- march with a goose-step: soldiers goose-stepped outside the monument
Oxford Dictionary
- a military marching step in which the legs are not bent at the knee.
- march with a goose step: soldiers goose-stepped outside
Oxford American Dictionary
- another term for Canada goose
Oxford American Dictionary
- a common North American goose with a black head and neck, a white chinstrap, and a loud, ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- a small goose with a mainly black head and neck, breeding in the arctic tundra of Eurasia and ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- a city in southeastern South Carolina, a northwestern suburb of Charleston; population 37,900 ...
Oxford American Dictionary
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- IPA[ɡo͞os]
美式
- a large waterbird with a long neck, short legs, webbed feet, and a short broad bill. Generally ...
- poke (someone) between the buttocks.
Oxford American Dictionary