goose
noun /ɡuːs/
  /ɡuːs/
 (plural geese 
Idioms  /ɡiːs/
  /ɡiːs/
)- [countable] a bird like a large duck with a long neck. Geese either live wild or are kept on farms. see also barnacle goose, Canada gooseTopics Birdsb2Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
- wild
 - roast
 
- flock
 - gaggle
 
- waddle
 - hiss
 - honk
 - …
 
 - [uncountable] meat from a goose
- roast goose
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- wild
 - roast
 
- flock
 - gaggle
 
- waddle
 - hiss
 - honk
 - …
 
 - [countable] a female goose compare gander
 - [countable] (old-fashioned, informal) a silly person see also golden goose, wild goose chase
 
Word OriginOld English gōs, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch gans and German Gans, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin anser and Greek khēn.
Idioms 
cook somebody’s goose 
- (informal) to destroy somebody’s chances of successTopics Difficulty and failurec2
 
kill the goose that lays the golden egg/eggs 
- (saying) to destroy something that would make you rich, successful, etc.Topics Difficulty and failurec2
 
not say boo to a goose (British English) 
(North American English not say boo to anyone)
- to be very shy or gentle
- He's so nervous he wouldn't say boo to a goose.
 
 
what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander 
- (old-fashioned, saying) what one person is allowed to do, another person must be allowed to do in a similar situationTopics Permission and obligationc2