Gotta
[got-uh] /ˈgɒt ə/
Pronunciation Spelling.
1.
got to; have got to.
/ˈɡɒtə/
verb, contraction (slang)
1.
got to
attempt to represent the casual pronunciation of got to, attested from 1885.
Read Also:
- Gotten
[got-n] /ˈgɒt n/ verb 1. a past participle of . [get] /gɛt/ verb (used with object), got or (Archaic) gat; got or gotten; getting. 1. to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension. 2. to cause to be in one’s possession or succeed […]
- Gotterdammerung
[got-er-dam-uh-roo ng, -ruhng; German gœt-uh r-dem-uh-roo ng] /ˌgɒt ərˈdæm əˌrʊŋ, -ˌrʌŋ; German ˌgœt ərˈdɛm əˌrʊŋ/ noun 1. German Mythology. the destruction of the gods and of all things in a final battle with evil powers: erroneous modern translation of the Old Icelandic Ragnarǫk, meaning “fate of the gods,” misunderstood as Ragnarökkr, meaning “twilight of the […]
- Gottfried von strassburg
/German ˈɡɔtfriːt fɔn ˈʃtraːsbʊrk/ noun 1. early 13th-century German poet; author of the incomplete epic Tristan and Isolde, the version of the legend that served as the basis of Wagner’s opera
- Gottingen
[gœt-ing-uh n] /ˈgœt ɪŋ ən/ noun 1. a city in central Germany. /ˈɡœtɪŋən/ noun 1. a city in central Germany, in Lower Saxony: important member of the Hanseatic League (14th century); university, founded in 1734 by George II of England. Pop: 122 883 (2003 est)
- Gottlob frege
[frey-guh] /ˈfreɪ gə/ noun 1. (Friedrich Ludwig) Gottlob [gawt-lohp] /ˈgɔt loʊp/ (Show IPA), 1848–1925, German mathematician and logician. /German ˈfreːɡə/ noun 1. Gottlob. 1848–1925, German logician and philosopher, who laid the foundations of modern formal logic and semantics in his Begriffsschrift (1879) person, history, philosophy, mathematics, logic, theory (1848-1925) A mathematician who put mathematics on […]