geezer
English
Etymology
From guiser. Compare also German Low German Kieser (“an obstinate person; brute; savage”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈɡizɚ/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈɡiːzə/
- Rhymes: -iːzə(ɹ)
- Homophones: geyser, Giza (in some dialects)
Noun
geezer (plural geezers)
- (informal, chiefly Britain, dated in US) A male person.
- 1922, P. G. Wodehouse, chapter 19, in Right Ho, Jeeves:
- You are a silly young geezer.
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- (Britain, chiefly Cockney, slang) Someone affable but morally dubious; a wide boy.
- 2003, Carlton Leach, Muscle, John Blake Publishing →ISBN
- He turned out to be a proper geezer who was willing to listen to my proposition that if he took the door at the Ministry, I would pay him £400 a month to mark my cards.
- 2009, Dreda Say Mitchell, Geezer Girls, Hachette UK →ISBN
- He was a bit of a geezer. Used to box with the Krays when he was a young 'un.
- 2013, Charlotte Ward, Why Am I Always the One Before 'The One'?, Hachette UK →ISBN
- When I'd first met Adam, at work when we were both 23, the fact that he seemed a little rough around the edges appealed to me. He was a bit of a geezer, a joker, one of the lads.
- 2003, Carlton Leach, Muscle, John Blake Publishing →ISBN
- (Britain, slang) Informal address to a male.
- Hi geezer, you alright?
- (informal, chiefly US, sometimes mildly derogatory) An old person, usually a male, typically a cranky old man.
- 1885, Corin, The Truth about the Stage:
- In the right-hand division lay the two old geezers, as Sandy styled the landlord and his wife.
- 2000, Moira McDonald, "Outtakes," Seattle Times, 25 Aug. (retrieved 6 Sep. 2008):
- The technical term for a female geezer is "old broad," but this is irrelevant, as nobody in Hollywood makes films about women over 55.
- 2014, The Geezer Gallery, "," (retrieved 31 Jan 2014):
- Why Geezer? Why would a fine arts gallery choose a name that conjures images of a grumpy old guy sitting on the front porch hollering, “get off my lawn”?
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- (Britain) A device for boiling water for such domestic uses as heating or washing; a boiler. The normal spelling is water geyser.
- (archaic, Britain, slang) Wife; old woman.
- 1882, J. F. Mitchell, Jimmy Johnson's Holiday:
- He'd flirt and boat, but never wrote / A note to his old geezer.
- 1886, Her Mother's Got the Hump:
- This frizzle-headed old geezer had a chin on her as rough well, as rough as her family, and they're rough 'uns.
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Synonyms
- (male person): See Thesaurus:man
- (affable but morally dubious person): spiv, wide boy
- (old man): See Thesaurus:old man
- (old woman): See Thesaurus:old woman
- (informal address): See Thesaurus:friend
- (wife): See Thesaurus:wife
Translations
male person
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informal: old person, especially male
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device for boiling water — see geyser
Anagrams
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