˜yÐÄvlog

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gooseherd

[ goos-hurd ]

noun

  1. a person who tends geese.


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of gooseherd1

First recorded in 1200–50, gooseherd is from Middle English gos herd. See goose, herd 2
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

"Yes, the son of a gooseherd in Fief; he served his time with the Zouaves."

From

The flocks were regularly taken to pasture and water, just as sheep are, and the man who tended them was called the gooseherd, corrupted into gozzerd.

From

In the words of the captive voevoda, Sheremetyeff, he was better fitted to be a gooseherd than a hetman.

From

Thus he suffered ill-will without bitterness, but also, knowing he had not himself deserved it, without humiliation; and when, having reached his tenth year, he was chosen to be the gooseherd of the village--not, indeed, with the goodwill of all, but simply because no other serviceable lad had offered--he burned with a desire to gain for himself commendation and approval.

From

Leading the coalition is respectable, onion-bald Per Albin Hansson, Premier and leader of the Social Democrats for more than ten years, onetime gooseherd, onetime militant pacifist.

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