goin

See also: Goin, go in, and goin'

English

Verb

goin

  1. Eye dialect spelling of going.
    • 1870, Various, Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19, 1870:
      I see they was goin, so I said:-- "My week-minded and misgided femails, hold your hosses a minnit, until an old statesman, who has served his country for 4 yeer as Gustise of the Peece, says a few remarks to you."
    • 1905, George Bernard Shaw, The Irrational Knot:
      Youre goin on fit to raise the street." "
    • 1994 April 29, Michael Dolan, “Nixon in Hell”, in Chicago Reader:
      Now I got nothing goin on but a fockin ping-pong tournament with Kurt Cobain, who fockin cheats, man, like it's gonna do him any fockin good.

Anagrams


Finnish

Noun

goin

  1. Instructive plural form of go.

Anagrams


Irish

Noun

goin f (genitive singular goine, nominative plural goine)

  1. bit, scrap
Declension

Noun

goin f (genitive singular gona, nominative plural gonta)

  1. wound
    Synonyms: cneá, créacht
  2. stab, sting, hurt
Declension
Derived terms

Verb

goin (present analytic goineann, future analytic goinfidh, verbal noun goineadh, past participle gointe)

  1. wound, stab, sting, hurt
    Synonyms: cneáigh, créachtaigh, leon
  2. (literary) mortally wound, slay
  3. (card games) jink, win (a game) outright
Conjugation

Mutation

Irish mutation
Radical Lenition Eclipsis
goin ghoin ngoin
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.
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