gotch
See also: Gotch
English
Etymology
From Ukrainian га́чі (háči), ґа́чі pl (gáči, “underwear”). Possibly back-formed from diminutive gotchies.
Noun
gotch (plural gotches)
- (Saskatchewan, Manitoba, slang) Men's underwear.
- 1998, Steven Erikson, This River Awakens[1], Tor, published 2013, →ISBN:
- I stopped beside Carl. 'Go ahead,' I told him. 'Pull his gotch right up over his fucking head.'
- 2009, Milton Ramsden, Northward to Love, Trafford Publishing, published 2009, →ISBN, page 56:
- Hilly howled as he lit the lamp and dove toward us clad in only his gotch.
- 2013, D. W. Wilson, Ballistics[2], Hamish Hamilton, published 2013, →ISBN:
- So I was off atop a mountain, a day out of town and soaked through the gotch, when Jack spotted the American car.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:gotch.
Derived terms
References
- Katherine Barber, editor (1998), “gaunch", "gonch", "gotch", "gotchies", "ginch", "gitch”, in The Canadian Oxford Dictionary, Don Mills, Ont.: Oxford University Press, →ISBN.
- Barber, Katherine. "11 Favourite Regionalisms Within Canada", in David Vallechinsky and Amy Wallace (2005). The Book of Lists, Canadian Edition. Knopf. →ISBN.
Cebuano
Etymology
Reverse spelling of tulog + ch.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: gotch
Verb
gotch
- to sleep