Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Goer
Go′er
,Noun.
[From Go.]
One who, or that which, goes; a runner or walker
; as: (a)
A foot.
[Obs.]
Chapman.
(b)
A horse, considered in reference to his gait;
as, a good
. goer
; a safe goer
This antechamber has been filled with comers and
goers
. Macaulay.
Webster 1828 Edition
Goer
GO'ER
,Noun.
1.
One that transacts business between parties; in an ill sense.2.
A foot.3.
A term applied to a horse; as a good goer; a safe goer. [Unusual in the U. States.]Definition 2024
goer
goer
English
Noun
goer (plural goers)
- One who, or that which, goes.
- Macaulay
- This antechamber has been filled with comers and goers.
- She is an avid movie-goer.
- Macaulay
- Anything, especially a machine such as a motor car, that performs well, or operates successfully.
- I bought her secondhand, but she's a good little goer.
- (Britain, slang) A person, often a woman, who enjoys sexual activity.
- She's a right little goer, I could hear her from next door.
- 1990, Hampton Charles, Advantage Miss Seeton, page 45,
- He winked at Parsons. "If I'm any judge, she must've bin a right little goer in 'er day."
- 2001, Peter Buse, Drama + Theory: Critical Approaches to Modern British Drama, page 102,
- ' […] (Intimate, man to man) Eh, I bet she's a goer, int she sunshine? She's got a fair pair of knockers on her too.'
- 2001, Edna Walsh, Bedbound and Misterman, ISBN 1854596403, page 22,
- 'I can tell that yer a right little goer, hey Larsie?!' I call over two slappers and slip them a few hundred! Before I know it me and Lars and the two slappers are rolling around a giant bed with the hungriest genitals in Gay Paree!
- (obsolete) A foot.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chapman to this entry?)
- (dated) A horse, considered in reference to its gait.
- a safe goer
- James Joyce
- I'd like nothing better this minute, said Mr Browne stoutly, than a rattling fine walk in the country or a fast drive with a good spanking goer between the shafts.
Derived terms
Terms derived from "goer" ("-goer")
Translations
one who goes
foot — see foot
horse in reference to its gait