Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of gee.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • He said he doesn't know he does it, and said: 'That's just the way I play and I have to shout to get myself geed up for a game.'

    Peter Crouch says England can stop Wales if they stop Gareth Bale 2011

  • The "engage" phase of the ritual is the tricky one, as there is no guarantee these excitable young men, geed on by the crowd in the fevered atmosphere of international sport, will wait for the call before diving into action with the party opposite.

    Square-dancing at the scrums engages full force of Brian Moore's law | Martin Kelner 2012

  • If, after number six, we had geed instead of hawing towards number seven, we would have been right on top of them.

    grouse Diary Entry grouse 2007

  • I do like the author though because I read her other book called 'Walk To moons' a very geed story, it makes you think about it.

    Reader reviews of The Wanderer by Sharon Creech. 2000

  • Without pausing, I geed up the mule and set off back to the old house.

    A Body In The Bath House Davis, Lindsey 2001

  • So when the earth-and-timber ramparts of Sulla's camp began to trace lines across the rolling Campanian horizon, Quintus Sertorius bade his cousin-in-law a grave goodbye, geed up his horse and departed.

    Fortune's Favorites McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1993

  • The mules geed up nicely; the gig rattled down the Valley of Murcia in which the Circus Maximus lay, and left the city through the Capena Gate.

    The First Man in Rome McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1990

  • Now here, thinks I, is a bonny kettle of fish, for Margaret was sitting with us, but for all the suddenness of it she never geed her beaver, and I kent then that she had word some way.

    The McBrides A Romance of Arran John Sillars

  • "They were a fairly happy couple" or "they geed as well as most," as he would have expressed it.

    Together Robert Herrick 1903

  • The pies and gell I thowt thot geed, (1) they hardlins could be beaten,

    Yorkshire Dialect Poems (1673-1915) and traditional poems Frederic William Moorman 1895

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