goujere

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From French gouge (prostitute, a camp trull). Compare good-year. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Noun[edit]

goujere (plural goujeres)

  1. (obsolete, rare) Venereal disease.
    • 1606, William Shakespeare, King Lear:
      Wipe thine eyes; The goujere shall devour them, flesh and fell, Ere they shall make me weep.
    • 1788, “Art. V. Ignoramus, Comoedia; Scriptore Georgic Ruggle, A. M. Aulae Clarensis, apud Cantabrigiensis, elim Socie; nunc denuo in Lucem Edita cum Notis Historicis et Criticis: Quibus injuper praeponitur ponens: Accurante Johanne Sidneio Hawkins”, in The Monthly Review Or Literary Journal, volume 78, page 200:
      Bonus annus de te (literally "the good year on you," as it is sometimes spelled in old English) means, The goujere on you; that is, with the editor's good leave, (See p. lxxxiii. ) The p–x on you.
    • 1804, Malcolm Laing, The History of Scotland:
      In the English version, "May the good year untye us'" the common corrupt expression of the age for the goujere, or venereal disease.