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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bogart

Bogart \Bogart\ n. Humphrey DeForest Bogart, famous movie actor; most commonly called Humphrey Bogart; b. 1899, d. 1957.

Syn: Humphrey Bogart, Humphrey DeForest Bogart.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
bogart

1969, "to keep a joint in your mouth," dangling from the lip like Humphrey Bogart's cigarette in the old movies, instead of passing it on. First attested in "Easy Rider." The word was also used 1960s with notions of "get something by intimidation, be a tough guy" (again with reference to the actor and the characters he typically played). In old drinking slang, Captain Cork was "a man slow in passing the bottle."

Wiktionary
bogart

n. (surname A=An English from=Dutch nodot=1), most famously borne by American actor http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humphrey%20Bogart.

Gazetteer
Bogart, GA -- U.S. town in Georgia
Population (2000): 1049
Housing Units (2000): 457
Land area (2000): 2.375401 sq. miles (6.152260 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.011023 sq. miles (0.028549 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2.386424 sq. miles (6.180809 sq. km)
FIPS code: 09068
Located within: Georgia (GA), FIPS 13
Location: 33.948355 N, 83.533880 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 30622
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Bogart, GA
Bogart
Wikipedia
Bogart (disambiguation)

Humphrey Bogart (1899–1957) was an American actor.

Bogart or Boggart may also refer to:

Bogart (surname)

Bogart is a surname, derived from the Dutch surname “Bogaert” or “Bogaart”, archaic spellings of modern “boomgaard”, which means “orchard”. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Bram Bogart (1921-2012), Dutch born Belgian painter
  • Evan Bogart (born 1978), American music executive
  • George Bogart (1933–2005), American painter
  • Henry Bogart (1729–1821), American surveyor and alderman
  • Humphrey Bogart (1899–1957), American actor
  • Jacob C. Bogart (c. 1820–?), ship captain and American Democratic politician
  • John Bogart (1836–1920), New York State Engineer and Surveyor (1888-1891)
  • Leo Bogart (1921–2005), American sociologist and media and marketing expert
  • Neil Bogart (1943–1982), American music executive
  • Paul Bogart (1919–2012), American television and film director
  • William Henry Bogart (1810–1888), American author

Usage examples of "bogart".

It gave you something to do, like in the movies, Bogart and his unfiltered coffin nails, which had eventually killed him.

Then the transistors were replaced by magnetic cores in a computer named Bogart.

Bogart, a thin white old man with a parrot’s face and a most birdly manner.

Why, Darkness, if you think that was bogarting, you must never have seen a true bogart.

Where are the Bogarts and Bacalls of our age, the Tracys and Hepburns, the Cary Grants and the Gary Coopers and the John Waynes?

But it is the twenty-first century and, endless Bogart reruns notwithstanding, most of my work consisted in sitting at my office console and using it to subvert the privacy laws of various states and countriesfinding out embarrassing things about people, so other people can divorce them or fire them or get a piece of the slickery.

Scootie settled in his bedroom to crunch dog biscuits and watch an old Bogart and Bacall movie on television.

Amaru's tone reminded him of the Mexican bandit who tried to coax Walter Huston, Humphrey Bogart, and Tim Holt from their gold diggings in the motion picture Treasure of the Sierra Madre.

Graham had been wondering why Vince's avatar didn't look more like Humphrey Bogart, and she'd just given him the explanation.

There was Humphrey Bogart and Marilyn Monroe and William Bendix and Randolph Scott —.

Indeed, the frothing ideological rants of the Hollywood Ten drove away such stars as Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Danny Kaye, and Gene Kelly, who had flown to Washington to support - as they thought - free speech.

To make it all the more exciting, Bogart hit safely, ran like a deer to third on Mullaney's grounder, which Wiler knocked down, and scored on a passed ball.

His head was wrapped with white gauze bandages, so he looked like Claude Rains in The Invisible Man or like Humphr ey Bogart in that movie about the escaped convict who has plastic surgery to foil the police and to start a new life with Lauren Bacall.

His head was wrapped with white gauze bandages, so he looked like Claude Rains in The Invisible Man or like Humphrey Bogart in that movie about the escaped convict who has plastic surgery to foil the police and to start a new life with Lauren Bacall.

James Bond, and Batman, not to speak of Tiffany lampshades, Super-Balls, iron crosses, pop sunglasses, badges and buttons with protest slogans or pornographic jokes, posters of Allen Ginsberg or Humphrey Bogart, false eyelashes, and innumerable other gimcracks and oddities that reflect--are tuned into--the rapidly changing pop culture.