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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
gumshoe
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But he makes the pulp gumshoe formula look like a comforting ritual only normal societies can perform.
▪ Dennis Miller is a down-at-the-heels gumshoe.
▪ With Petersen under lock and key, life for the gumshoes of the Office of Security returned to normal.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
gumshoe

gumshoe \gum"shoe\ n.

  1. A detective; a private eye. [slang]

  2. A shoe made of rubber, as a rubber overshoe.

  3. A sneaker[3].

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
gumshoe

"plainclothes detective," 1906, from the rubber-soled shoes they wore (which were so called from 1863); from gum (n.1) + shoe (n.).

Wiktionary
gumshoe

n. 1 A sneaker or rubber overshoe. 2 (context slang English) A detective.

WordNet
gumshoe
  1. n. someone who is a detective [syn: dick, hawkshaw]

  2. a waterproof overshoe that protects shoes from water or snow [syn: arctic, galosh, golosh, rubber]

Wikipedia
Gumshoe (video game)

Gumshoe is a video game developed and published by Nintendo for the NES and released in 1986 in North America and on June 15, 1988, in Europe. Gumshoe is played using the NES Zapper. The game was designed by Yoshio Sakamoto.

Gumshoe (film)

Gumshoe is a 1971 film, and was the directorial debut of British director Stephen Frears. Written by local author Neville Smith, who appears as Arthur, the film is set in Liverpool with Albert Finney playing the role of Eddie Ginley. Ginley is a bingo-caller and occasional club comedian who dreams of being a private eye of the kind he knows from films and pulp novels. Having put an advertisement in a local newspaper (the Liverpool Echo) as a birthday present to himself, Ginley is suddenly contacted for what appears to be an actual piece of detective work...

The film has many comic moments as it switches between detective novel and affectionate spoof. It has some shots of Liverpool buildings that have long since been demolished, including the employment exchange on Leece Street.

Gumshoe was the first of two films with original music scores by Andrew Lloyd Webber (the other was The Odessa File, in 1974). Some of the music was re-used in Lloyd Webber's musical version of Sunset Boulevard (1993).

Several scenes in the London part of the narrative take place in and around Paul Brunton's famous occult bookstore, The Atlantis Bookshop.

Despite its relatively lightweight tone, Frears' film is not without its contentious moments. TV broadcasts are nowadays rare because of Ginley's use of racist language and insults (such as calling a black African character " Mighty Joe Young" and a "spade" — see list of ethnic slurs). Another scene was significantly (and clumsily) shortened before release because of its detailed depiction of a heroin-user preparing and taking his 'fix'.

After years of unavailability, Gumshoe was released on DVD in 2009.

Gumshoe

Gumshoe is a type of shoe also known by the term Galoshes

Gumshoe may also refer to:

  • Detective
  • Gumshoe (film), Stephen Frears's 1971 directorial debut
  • Gumshoe, the Hardboiled Detective in the 30s, a 1981 book-based game published by Sleuth Publications
  • Gumshoe (video game), a 1986 Nintendo shooter
  • GUMSHOE System, a role-playing system designed for investigative scenarios
  • Detective Dick Gumshoe, a character in the Ace Attorney series of video games

Usage examples of "gumshoe".

Now, though, as we near the millennium, we have a new breed of feminist gumshoes, spearheaded by Sharon McCone, V.

He knew all about grade creep in Washington, but this guy was no midlevel gumshoe.

And yet a collar-sniffing gumshoe dick with a combover had somehow gotten the drop on him, pulled off his mask, shown him for what he really was.

It was important not to get caught up in fantasies of magnifying glasses and cigar ash, or gumshoe with handgun.

In time, Watkins thought, the gumshoe might be in danger of becoming the gunbutt, with his ass parked for hours in front of either a mobile VDT or one on a desk at HQ.