Dack vs Goose - What's the difference?
dack | goose |
Any of various grazing waterfowl of the family Anatidae, bigger than a duck
The flesh of the goose used as food.
*
(slang) A silly person
* {{quote-book, 1906, Langdon Mitchell, chapter=The New York Idea, Best Plays of the Early American Theatre, 1787-1911, page=430
, passage=I'm sorry for you, but you're such a goose .}}
(archaic) A tailor's iron, heated in live coals or embers, used to press fabrics.
* Scene 3:
(South Africa, slang, dated) A young woman or girlfriend.
(slang) To sharply poke or pinch someone's buttocks. Derived from a goose's inclination to bite at a retreating intruder's hindquarters.
To stimulate, to spur.
(slang) To gently accelerate an automobile or machine, or give repeated small taps on the accelerator.
(UK slang) Of private-hire taxi drivers, to pick up a passenger who has not pre-booked a cab. This is unauthorised under UK licensing conditions.
English nouns with irregular plurals
As verbs the difference between dack and goose
is that dack is (australia|informal) to pull down someone's trousers as a practical joke while goose is (slang) to sharply poke or pinch someone's buttocks derived from a goose's inclination to bite at a retreating intruder's hindquarters.As a noun goose is
any of various grazing waterfowl of the family anatidae, bigger than a duck.dack
English
goose
English
Noun
(geese)- There is a flock of geese on the pond.
citation
- Come in, tailor. Here you may roast your goose .