Gee vs Lee - What's the difference?
gee | lee |
A general exclamation of surprise or frustration.
(often as imperative to a draft animal) To turn in a direction away from the driver, typically to the right.
(UK, dialect, obsolete) To agree; to harmonize.
A gee-gee; a horse.
* 1879 , , Act I:
*:You'll say a better Major-General has never sat a gee .
(slang) ; a thousand dollars.
(physics) ; the unit of acceleration equal to that exerted by gravity at the earth's surface.
* {{quote-magazine
, year = 1949
, month = July
, first = Margaret
, last = St. Clair
, authorlink = Margaret St. Clair
, title = Sacred Martian Pig
, magazine = Startling Stories
, page = 92
, passage = I've more muscle than you, and I'm used to greater gee , being from earth.
}}
* {{quote-book
, year = 1987
, first = Tom
, last = Clancy
, authorlink = Tom Clancy
, title = Patriot Games
, page = 449
, passage = So if you fire the Phoenix inside that radius, he just can't evade it. The missile can pull more gees than any pilot can.
}}
(US, slang) A guy.
* 1939 , (Raymond Chandler), The Big Sleep , Penguin 2011, p. 197:
(Ireland, slang) (vagina), (vulva)
* 1987 , (Roddy Doyle), (The Commitments) , King Farouk, Dublin:
* 1991 , (Roddy Doyle), , p. 65. Secker & Warburg (ISBN: 0-436-20052-X):
* 1992 , (Samuel Beckett), (Dream of Fair to Middling Women) , p. 71. John Calder (ISBN: 978-0714542133):
* 1995 , (w, Joseph O'Connor), (Red Roses and Petrol) , p. 7. Methuen (ISBN: 978-0413699909):
English interjections
----
(sailing) A protected cove or harbor, out of the wind.
(sailing) The side of the ship away from the wind.
A sheltered place, especially a place protected from the wind by some object; the side sheltered from the wind; shelter; protection.
* Morte d'Arthure
* Tyndall
As an interjection gee
is a general exclamation of surprise or frustration.As a verb gee
is (often as imperative to a draft animal) to turn in a direction away from the driver, typically to the right.As a noun gee
is a gee-gee; a horse or gee can be or gee can be (ireland|slang) (vagina), (vulva)[http://booksgooglecom/books?id=4yfseghljboc&pg=pa850&lpg=pa850&dq=gee+%22om+dalzell%22+%22terry+victor%22&source=bl&ots=7jrck2k_5c&sig=gvq1g1ffirwftymi7wgybhf0304&hl=en&sa=x&ei=tddat5pc5jsjatgoljml&ved=0ccaq6aewaa#v=onepage&q&f=false the new partridge dictionary of slang and unconventional english ] p 850, tom dalzell and terry victor routledge, 2006 isbn: 0-415-25937-1.As a proper noun lee is
for someone who lived near a meadow (the anglo-saxon for meadow being ley or leag).gee
English
Etymology 1
A shortening of (Jesus), perhaps as in the oath (by Jesus)Interjection
(en interjection)- Gee , I didn't know that!
- Gee , this is swell fun!
Usage notes
Gee'' is generally considered somewhat dated or juvenile. It is often used for ironic effect, with the speaker putting on the persona of a freshly-scrubbed freckle-faced kid from days gone by (e.g. 1950 sitcom children, such as Beaver on ).Synonyms
* (exclamation of surprise) geez, gosh, gollyDerived terms
* gee whiz * gee whillikers, gee willikers, gee willickersEtymology 2
Verb
- This horse won't gee when I tell him to.
- You may need to walk up to the front of the pack and physically gee the lead dog.
- Mush, huskies. Now, gee'''! ' Gee !
- (Forby)
Derived terms
* gee haw whimmy diddleCoordinate terms
* hawNoun
(en noun)Etymology 3
Pronunciation of the letter (G).Noun
(en noun)- One branch of English society drops its initial aitches, and another branch ignores its terminal gees .
- ten gees
- Just off the highway there's a small garage and paint-shop run by a gee named Art Huck.
Etymology 4
Noun
(en noun)The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional Englishp. 850, Tom Dalzell and Terry Victor. Routledge, 2006. ISBN: 0-415-25937-1.
- The brassers, yeh know wha' I mean. The gee . Is tha' why?
- But he'd had to keep feeling them up and down from her knees up to her gee after she'd said that....
- Lily Neary has a lovely gee and her pore Paddy got his B.A. and by the holy fly I wouldn't recommend you to ask me what class of a tree they were under when he put his hand on her and enjoyed that.
- And I thought, gee is certainly something that gobshite knows all about.
See also
* ("gee" on Wikipedia)Anagrams
*References
lee
English
Noun
(en noun)- the lee of a mountain, an island, or a ship
- We lurked under lee .
- Desiring me to take shelter in his lee .