What is the meaning of GOG. Phrases containing GOG
See meanings and uses of GOG!Slangs & AI meanings
Contributor defines this as "when downhill skiing u fall really hard and your skiis, poles and goggle fall off and go everywhere. Starting to be used for lots of sports." In use, for example, you get "Dude, i just saw some poser take a mad yardsale on the double black diamond, I bet he's at the hospital right now."
Goggles is slang for spectacles.
A liquor specific brand of beer goggles.
Noun. Television. [1950s] {Informal}
Noun. Wellington boots. Cf. 'wellybobs'. [North/Midlands use]
Religious (especially evangelically religious) person
Goggle is British slang for to stare.
Gog was th century Welsh slang for anxiety, desire, eagerness.
Noun. Wellington boots. Cf. 'welly-gogs'.
Goggy is British slang for a misfit.
They do nothing.
Evacuate the bowel, crap. Pronounced 'go-go-nuh' Contracted form of 'got to go now'.
The device that attaches to your face after the consumption of alcohol that turns even the most ugly girl into an absolute stunner. Normally referred to the morning after as in "Christ! Did you see that munter I pulled last night, my beer goggles must have been well and truly strapped on". Can be modified by referring to the degree of tightness with which the beer goggles are strapped to the face as in 'My beer goggles were on so tight they were cutting into my face!"
Lopsided.
Gogglebox is British slang for a television set.
Noun. The impaired judgement from the excessive consumption of alcohol (beer) that makes an otherwise unappealing person or thing seem attractive. E.g."I was obviously wearing beer goggles last night; when I awoke and saw who I'd brought home the previous night I nearly threw up, she had 3 eyes, a green beard and tentacles coming out of the top of her head." [1990s]
Imaginary spectacles induced by drinking
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n.
A carangoid oceanic fish (Trachurops crumenophthalmus), having very large and prominent eyes; -- called also goggle-eye, big-eyed scad, and cicharra.
a.
Full and rolling, or staring; -- said of the eyes.
a.
Prominent; staring, as the eye.
n. pl.
Goggles intended to rectify strabismus by permitting vision only directly in front.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Goggle
v. i.
Colored glasses for relief from intense light.
n.
The goggle-eye, or fresh-water rock bass.
n.
The goggler.
n.
The goggler; -- called also big-eyed scad. See Goggler.
v. i.
A strained or affected rolling of the eye.
v. i.
Any screen or cover for the eyes, with or without a slit for seeing through.
n.
One of two or more species of American fresh-water fishes of the family Centrarchidae, esp. Chaenobryttus antistius, of Lake Michigan and adjacent waters, and Ambloplites rupestris, of the Great Lakes and Mississippi Valley; -- so called from their prominent eyes.
v. i.
A disk with a small aperture, to direct the sight forward, and cure squinting.
v. i.
To roll the eyes; to stare.
n.
See Gurglet.
a.
Gognizant; aware; communicate.
imp. & p. p.
of Goggle
v. i.
A kind of spectacles with short, projecting eye tubes, in the front end of which are fixed plain glasses for protecting the eyes from cold, dust, etc.
n.
Haste; ardent desire to go.
a.
Having prominent and distorted or rolling eyes.
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