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Crossword clues for gosh

gosh
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
gosh
interjection
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
Gosh, I didn't know that about Louis.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
gosh

1757, altered pronunciation of God. Probably from by gosse (mid-16c.).

Wiktionary
gosh

interj. (context minced oath English) A mild expression of surprise or enthusiasm as to be put in place of “God”, particularly in fear of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten%20Commandments.

Wikipedia
Gosh

Gosh may refer to:

  • Great Ormond Street Hospital, a children's hospital in London, England
  • Gosh, Armenia, a town in the Tavush Province of Armenia
  • Mkhitar Gosh, Armenian scholar and priest after whom the village is named
  • GOSH! Magazine, an Los Angeles-based arts and entertainment magazine published 1978/79
  • Minced oath form of "God"
  • "Gosh", a song by Jamie xx on his 2015 album In Colour

Usage examples of "gosh".

So bimeby mother come up and i made beleeve i was asleep and mother set down by the bed and said are you asleep Harry, and i said yes before i thought, and then she sorter laffed and began to talk to me and told me how sory it made her feel to see me so cross and doing bad things and she wanted me to be better and not wurry her for she dident feel very well and gosh before i knew it i was balling rite out.

Well, by gosh, Gid reflected, if he could hold onto the worship of an ole bandit like Hatch, he certainly was a better executive than MOST people, by gosh!

He could have let the Mozo do the driving, but, gosh darn it, driving your whole family around in the big old family vehicle was one of the joys of fatherhood.

In 1460, the year previous, a group of disgruntled womanless miners, tired of their own company, had stopped a load of Holy Prostitutes on their way to the Temples of Gosh on Braunfels.

Then bang, gosh, one night in Calumet City, Indiana, she had shown up again out of nowhere.

California insurance lawyer Gordon Park told CBS, "What they would do is throw a brick through their front window and say, 'Ok, gosh, I got burglarized.

Of course she was still the center­piece, gosh, yes — Jessie Mahout Burlingame, still a shade under forty, still fairly trim at five-seven and a hundred and twenty-five pounds, gray eyes, brownish-red hair (she covered the gray that had begun to show up about five years ago with a glossy rinse and was fairly sure Gerald had never known).

And Will, below, gazing up, eyes wet, mouth wide, thought, Oh my gosh, why didn't I see it before?