goof
See also: Goof
English
Etymology
Perhaps from dialectal English goff (“foolish clown”), from earlier goffe, in which case further etymology is uncertain.
Perhaps from Middle English goffen (“to speak in a frivolous manner”), possibly from Old English gaf, ġegaf (“base; wanton; lewd”, adj), Old English ġegaf (“buffoonery; scurrility”, noun), gaffetung, golfettung (“buffoonery; mockery”). Compare English dialectal gauffin (“lightheaded; foolish; giddy”), Scots gaff, gawf (“to talk loudly; babble”), Scots gaffaw (“a loud laugh”).
Alternatively, perhaps from Middle French goffe (“awkward; stupid”). Compare also Spanish gofo, Italian goffo.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɡuːf/
- Rhymes: -uːf
Noun
goof (plural goofs)
- (US, informal) A mistake or error,
- I made a goof in that last calculation.
- (US, cinematography, informal) An error made during production which finds its way into the final release.
- (US, informal) A foolish and/or silly person; a goofball.
- Your little brother is a total goof.
- (Canada, prison slang) A child molester.
Synonyms
Translations
a mistake or error
a foolish person
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Verb
goof (third-person singular simple present goofs, present participle goofing, simple past and past participle goofed)
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:make a mistake
Translations
To make a mistake
To engage in mischief
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Anagrams
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