Goody vs Goodo - What's the difference?
goody | goodo |
A small amount of something good to eat.
Any small, usually free, item.
(Ireland) pudding made by boiling bread in milk with sugar and spices.
(obsolete) shortening of goodwife, a 17th century puritan honorific.
protagonist or hero
An American fish, the lafayette or spot.
(Australian slang) Good; used after the noun .
* 1937 , , Wings Above the Diamantina , 1985,
(UK, Australian, NZ, colloquial, slang) Good; used to show approval or satisfaction .
* 1957 , Horace Sawyer Mazet, Shark Fishing off the Great Barrier Reef ,
* 1984 , , 1995,
* 2004 , David L. Andrews, Manchester United: A Thematic Study ,
* 2009 , George W. Adams, Under the Southern Cross ,
* 2010 , , A Simpler Time ,
As interjections the difference between goody and goodo
is that goody is used to indicate pleasure or delight while goodo is good; used to show approval or satisfaction.As a noun goody
is a small amount of something good to eat.As an adjective goodo is
good; used after the noun.goody
English
Noun
(goodies)goodo
English
Adjective
goodo' (''comparative'' ''and'' ''superlative'' ''as for'' ' good )page 287,
- To Knowles he said: “Quick! Give her tucker!. She hungry. She eat. She sleep. Bimeby she goodo .”
Interjection
page 61,
- “Now we?re cooking! It works!” crowed Bob. “And now before it grows dark let?s pour it off into our storage tanks.”
- “Goodo , Bob. We rich now!” Ebony gloated.
page 40,
- “Goodo ,” Picnic said, blinking. “Man, look at the quail.”
page 203,
- Some bantering responses joked about whether David May was connected to Brian May, and the rock group Queen, but most expressed a sense of relief that anyone was willing to come to the small-town, economically struggling club. Jo Tomlinson: ‘Goodo , a signing! Even though we did boo him last year...’
page 111,
- John held both my hands tightly, looking straight into my eyes for several moments. His eyes moistened, “I don?t know how to thank you – it?s been quite a spell since my Janeie has been happy.” Bob gleefully joined in, “Goodo' Sport!...' Goodo !”
unnumbered page,
- ‘I have a sore elbow...’ I fib in a small whine, as I know she worries sometimes when I have too many nightmares.
- ‘Goodo . Well, let me “tiss” it better,’ she whispers back, so as not to wake Dad from his heavy, snoring slumber, and with her eyes still closed—as the surrounding bush continues to coo its soft night noises through her open bedroom window—she reaches out, finds my proffered elbow, and applies a kiss.