Ooer vs Doer - What's the difference?
ooer | doer |
(UK) said to acknowledge a double entendre or something that sounds rude
Someone who does, performs, or executes; an active person, an agent.
* 2002 , , The Great Nation , Penguin 2003, page 295:
* 2008 , Aleksandra Lojek-Magdziarz, The Guardian , 25 Mar 2008:
As an interjection ooer
is (uk) said to acknowledge a double entendre or something that sounds rude.As an adjective doer is
servile.As a noun doer is
serf.ooer
English
Alternative forms
* oo-erInterjection
(en interjection)Derived terms
* ooer missus, oo-er missusAnagrams
*doer
English
Noun
(en noun)- Though his name was closely linked to that of Physiocrats, he was less an armchair intellectual like Quesnay or the elder Mirabeau than a doer in the vein of Bertin and Trudaine [...].
- In schools, submission, not curiosity, was a highly valued virtue. Thinkers were out, doers were in.