释义 |
gob I. \ˈgäb\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English gobbe, from Middle French gobe large morsel of food, large mouthful, back-formation from gobet mouthful, bite, piece — more at gobbet 1. : a lump or mass of indefinite or variable shape < the mud was thick … and clung to our shoes like huge gobs of discolored dough — H.D.Skidmore > < high fat clouds like gobs of whipped cream — William Faulkner > 2. : a large amount — usually used in plural < he has gobs of money — P.B.Kyne > < they will certainly find in it gobs … of unadulterated narrative — C.J.Rolo > 3. a. : a large mouthful of food < a beer to wash down the last gob of gluey rice — Earle Birney > b. : a large lump of some substance that is chewed and not swallowed (as tobacco) 4. : a mass of molten glass gathered on a blowpipe or in a feeder as the initial step in forming a glass object 5. a. : the broken waste or filling left or placed in old mine workings b. : a space from which material (as coal) has been mined II. noun (-s) Etymology: Irish Gaelic & Scottish Gaelic, beak, protruding mouth : mouth < a short stumpy man with a pipe perpetually in his gob — Walter Macken > III. noun (-s) Etymology: origin unknown : sailor — usually used of an enlisted man in the United States Navy |