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Prajurit vs Goldbrick - What's the difference?

prajurit | goldbrick |

prajurit

Not English

Prajurit has no English definition. It may be misspelled.

English words similar to 'prajurit':

presort, prescript, procreant, precredit, proscript, precariat, perjurest, procurest

goldbrick

English

Alternative forms

* gold-brick

Noun

(en noun)
  • A gold brick, especially one that is fraudulent or nonexistent; a swindle, a con.
  • * 1920 , , (The Smart Set),'' January 1920, collected in ''(Tales of the Jazz Age):
  • *:Experience is the biggest gold brick in the world. All older people have it for sale.
  • * 1932 , , Memoirs Of A Soldier Of Fortune , Kessinger Publishing (2006), ISBN 9781428658349, page 98:
  • These, as a rule, were not adverse to buying a goldbrick as long as they knew that there was a chance for them to dump it on somebody else afterwards with some profit.
  • * 1932 , in , Volume 166, page 520:
  • To-day, American attitude toward Europe is comparable to that of the country greenhorn who, having bought a goldbrick on Broadway, now fills the air not merely with the denunciation of the sharpers who tricked his credulity —
  • * 1945 , in the Department of Agriculture and Immigration Bulletin , Volumes 422–433, page 5:
  • The average farmer may be less of a victim than some other people by reason of his isolation, conservatism, and hard earned money, but he, too, has too often bought a goldbrick that did not materialize.
  • * , quoted in Lewis M. Dabney, Edmund Wilson: A Life in Literature , ][http://www.amazon.com/Edmund-Wilson-Literature-Lewis-Dabney/dp/0374113122 Macmillan (2005), ISBN 9780374113124, page 485:
  • (US slang, dated) A shirker or malingerer
  • * 1945 , Dr. Charley Haly, quoted in Doc: heroic stories of medics, corpsmen, and surgeons in combat by Mark R. Littleton, p. 68
  • *:Mac, there’s not a confounded thing wrong with you. You are an excellent physical specimen and in good health. You’re nothing but a goldbrick . Now, get your butt out of here and don’t ever come back again unless you’re really sick or need an immunization.
  • * 2004 (written ), (Howard Ashman), , “Proud of your Boy”:
  • *:Tell me that I’ve been a louse and loafer
  • *:You won’t get a fight here, no ma’am
  • *:Say I’m a goldbrick, a good-off, no good
  • *:But that couldn’t be all that I am
  • (US slang, dated) A swindler
  • Verb

  • (US slang, dated) To shirk or malinger
  • (US slang, dated) To swindle
  • Derived terms

    * goldbricker

    References