A gobat


[french gaw-ba] /french gɔˈba/
noun
albert
[french al-ber] /french alˈbɛr/ (show ipa), 1843–1914, swiss lawyer and statesman: n-bel peace prize 1902.

Read Also:

  • A gogo

    [uh goh-goh] /ə ˈgoʊˌgoʊ/ adverb as much as you like; to your heart’s content; galore: food and drink à gogo. with go-go music and dancing or a go-go atmosphere (used especially in the names of cabarets, discotheques, and the like): they danced all night at the mistral à gogo. also, à gogo, à go-go. à […]

  • A goldberg

    [gohld-burg] /ˈgoʊld bɜrg/ noun arthur joseph, 1908–90, u.s. jurist, statesman, and diplomat: -ssociate justice of the u.s. supreme court 1962–65; amb-ssador to the u.n. 1965–68. reuben lucius (“rube”) 1883–1970, u.s. cartoonist, whose work often depicts deviously complex and impractical inventions.

  • A goncalves dias

    [goo n-sawl-vis dee-ahs] /gʊ̃ˈsɔl vɪs ˈdi ɑs/ noun antonio [an-taw-nyoo] /ɛ̃ˈtɔ nyʊ/ (show ipa), 1823–64, brazilian poet.

  • A goner

    something or someone that is dead, doomed, ruined, or past recovery, as in if this new drug doesn’t work, he’s a goner; or without a working transmission, my car’s a goner. synonyms of this idiom, such as a gone goose or chicken or gosling, are no longer heard as much. [ ; mid-1800s ]

  • A good deal

    also, a great deal . see under good deal


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