The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gote \Gote\, n. [Cf. LG. gote, gaute, canal, G. gosse; akin to
giessen to pour, shed, AS. ge['o]tan, and E. fuse to melt.]
A channel for water. [Prov. Eng.]
--Crose.
Wiktionary
n. 1 A drain; sluice; ditch or gutter. 2 (context UK dialectal English) A drainage pipe. 3 (context UK dialectal Northern England Scotland English) A deep miry place.
Wikipedia
Gote can refer to the following:
Usage examples of "gote".
Charles Flanders but he dident have but one room and his shed wasent big enuf to keep a gote, and then we went over to old Jethrow Simpsons and Jethrow he said if we wood help him haul wood enuf to fill his shed we cood keep her in his barn as long as we wanted to and have enuf hay two.
Within the saide Garland I beheld a rough Milche Gote, which a little child did suck, sitting vnder hir side vpon his fleshie young legges one streight foorth, and the other retract and bowed vnder him.
Which when Malbecco saw, out of his bushVpon his hands and feete he crept full light,And like a Gote emongst the Gotes did rush,That through the helpe of his faire hornes on hight,And misty dampe of misconceiuing night,And eke through likenesse of his gotish beard,He did the better counterfeite aright:So home he marcht emongst the horned heard,That none of all the Satyres him espyde or heard.