A Collection of College Words and Customs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about A Collection of College Words and Customs.

A Collection of College Words and Customs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about A Collection of College Words and Customs.

  Alas! how dearly for the fun they paid,
  Whom the Proffs gobbled, and the Tutors too.
    The Gallinipper, Dec. 1849.

  I never gobbled one poor flat,
  To cheer me with his soft dark eye, &c.
    Yale Tomahawk, Nov. 1849.

  I went and performed, and got through the burning,
  But oh! and alas!  I was gobbled returning.
    Yale Banger, Nov. 1850.

Upon that night, in the broad street, was I by one of the brain-deficient men gobbled.—­Yale Battery, Feb. 1850.

  Then shout for the hero who gobbles the prize.
    Songs of Yale, 1853, p. 39.

At Cambridge, Eng., this word is used in the phrase gobbling Greek, i.e. studying or speaking that tongue.

Ambitious to “gobble” his Greek in the haute monde.—­Alma Mater, Vol.  I. p. 79.

It was now ten o’clock, and up stairs we therefore flew to gobble Greek with Professor ——.—­Ibid., Vol.  I. p. 127.

You may have seen him, traversing the grass-plots, “gobbling Greek” to himself.—­Ibid., Vol.  I. p. 210.

GOLGOTHA. The place of a skull.  At Cambridge, Eng., in the University Church, “a particular part,” says the Westminster Review, “is appropriated to the heads of the houses, and is called Golgotha therefrom, a name which the appearance of its occupants renders peculiarly fitting, independent of the pun.”—­Am. ed., Vol.  XXXV. p. 236.

GONUS.  A stupid fellow.

He was a gonus; perhaps, though, you don’t know what gonus means.  One day I heard a Senior call a fellow a gonus.  “A what?” said I.  “A great gonus,” repeated he. “Gonus,” echoed I, “what’s that mean?” “O,” said he, “you’re a Freshman and don’t understand.”  A stupid fellow, a dolt, a boot-jack, an ignoramus, is called here a gonus.  “All Freshmen,” continued he gravely, “are gonuses.”—­The Dartmouth, Vol.  IV. p. 116.

If the disquisitionist should ever reform his habits, and turn his really brilliant talents to some good account, then future gonuses will swear by his name, and quote him in their daily maledictions of the appointment system.—­Amherst Indicator, Vol.  I. p. 76.

The word goney, with the same meaning, is often used.

“How the goney swallowed it all, didn’t he?” said Mr. Slick, with great glee.—­Slick in England, Chap.  XXI.

Some on ’em were fools enough to believe the goney; that’s a fact.—­Ibid.

GOOD FELLOW.  At the University of Vermont, this term is used with a signification directly opposite to that which it usually has.  It there designates a soft-brained boy; one who is lacking in intellect, or, as a correspondent observes, “an epithetical fool.”

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A Collection of College Words and Customs from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.