guy n.1
1. a fool.
Fudge Family in Paris Letter VIII 90: What a Guy! | ||
Bell’s Life in London 10 Apr. 2/3: There vas a precious crowd [...] and some of ’em looked such guys, and know’d no more about riding than a pig. | ||
Ingoldsby Legends I (1889) 26: You’d lift up your hands in amazement, and cry, – ‘Well! – I never did see such a regular Guy!’. | ||
Cockney Adventures 24 Feb. 131: ‘There’s a pair of guys,’ said a lad in a shiny hat and corduroy coat. | ||
Works (1862) VII 26: I’m quite as fit for a public procession as that regular Guy, old Griffis, with his red nose, and pot-belly, and spindle-shanks. | ‘Masonic Secret’||
Mary’s Birthday I i: Dry up, you hold Guy. | ||
‘Under the Earth’ in Dick’s Standard Plays (1871) I i: What a guy you look! | ||
Edinburgh Eve. News 5 Apr. 4/5: The Chinese [are] regarded in Paris as a legitimate laughing-stock, as [...] the word pékin — a synonym in Parisian slang for what the English call a ‘guy’. | ||
St Louis Globe-Democrat 19 Jan. n.p.: A member of the thrown-out ‘brigade’ [...] entreats the newcomer not to ‘give it away,’ which causes that party to inquire if they take him for a ‘gillie,’ a ‘guy’ or a ‘flat,’ and if they are not afraid they will ’get the collar’? | ||
Duke’s Children (1954) 530: I should so hate to fig myself out and look like a guy. | ||
Nat. Police Gaz. (NY) 24 Jan. 12/1: How Greenhorns Are Fleeced [...] A new racket of the ‘guys’ has come to light in this city. | ||
🎵 My bags are ‘baggy’ and I feel such a guy, / It’s enough to make a parson swear! | ‘It’s Enough to Make a Parson Swear’||
Bird o’ Freedom 1 Jan. 2/2: [She] attracted the attention of the stage-manager by the fact that she knew how to dress and make up without making a guy of herself. | ||
Times (Shreveport, LA) 12 May 3/5: The word ‘geezer’ is a term of contempt, the same as [...] ‘guy’. | ||
Types From City Streets 77: A ‘softy’ and a ‘guy’ are the worst things on earth. | ||
Truth (Brisbane) 15 Jan. 9/5: When the women have succeeded in swindling some GULLIBLE GUY these wretched wasters [i.e. pimps] swoop down to share the spoil. | ||
Fourth Form Friendship 179: ‘[S]he’ll be going about the school looking such a guy! She’ll wonder why everybody is smiling’. | ||
Marvel 3 July 5: Ah, dat’s my misfortune, old guy! | ||
May Fair (1947) 31: I didn’t tell you about this, sir, so that you should make a guy of me. | ||
(con. 1920s) Your Dinner’s Poured Out! 160: Oh they dressed me up in armour, / And they made me look a guy. |
2. a dark lantern; thus stow the guy, cover or douse the lantern.
Lex. Balatronicum n.p.: Guy. A dark lanthorn: an allusion to Guy Faux, the principal actor in the gunpowder plot. Stow the guy: conceal the lanthorn. | ||
Grose’s Classical Dict. of the Vulgar Tongue. | ||
Vocabulum. | ||
Aus. Sl. Dict. 34: Guy, a dark lantern. | ||
Criminal Sl. (rev. edn). |
3. an ugly or badly dressed person.
Dict. of the Turf, the Ring, the Chase, etc. 92: Guy, a — an ugly mug, or queerly-togged old one, like the effigies of Guy Fawkes on the fifth of November. | ||
Morn. Post 25 Dec. 3/5: if the Londoners were to see him they would at once say, ‘what a guy’. | ||
Plain or Ringlets? (1926) 43: It is a hard thing for a young lady to find herself a ‘guy’ in the midst of splendour. | ||
Sl. Dict. | ||
Dead Bird (Sydney) 17 May 2/3: ‘You look positively charming to-night.’ (She thought, ‘What a foarful guy!’). |
4. (US) a trick or hoax, a joke.
Observer (London) 29 Nov. 4/2: We did not notice any one quite so celebrious as Guy Earl of Warwick himself [...] There were ‘Guys’ enough to astonish the natives and to puzzle the vulgar. | ||
Congressional Record 1022/1: He was a democrat, as he says, for a ‘guy’ [DA]. | ||
Tales of Mean Streets (1983) 136: The orator did not take kindly to the proposal at first, strongly suspecting something in the nature of ‘guy’ or ‘kid’. | ||
Atlanta Constitution 3 Oct. 7/6 : The average fakir is selling all sorts of invaluable goods [...] ‘Now say,’ said one when notified that he must get a license by morning or stop business, ‘yer ain’t t’rowin’ de merry giggle at us, is yer? Now, on de level, I ain’t got no rubber in me neck; don’t try yer guys on me; try me nex’ door neighbor and yer gets a dead proper take-out ef yer runs him out er de biz.’. | ||
Cap’n Warren’s Wards iii 37: I was only joking [...]. It’s a standing guy, you know [DA]. |
5. a crimp, one who tricks men into joining the navy.
Tait’s Mag. II. 451: These crimps are Jews; there are a few Christians who profess the same commercial faith, and they are called guys. These crimps and guys prey like sharks on the unfortunate sailors . |
6. (US) a comical fellow, a smart aleck n.
Complete Short Stories (1993) 6: Do I know w’ere dey is? Yer jest bet I do [...] wot der yer tink I am? A cheap guy? | ‘“Frisco Kid’s” Story’||
Five Notions 41: The neighbours said, ‘My eye! / Now ain’t he just a guy?’. | ‘The Volunteer’ in||
Haxby’s Circus 349: Max and Lily hated Gina to make a guy of herself. |
7. an act of running off, of leaving surreptitiously; usu. in phrs. below.
Sporting Times 23 Apr. 1/3: He soon edged off, and Bella, wond’ring at his sudden ‘guy’. | ‘Bella’s “Best Girl”’
In phrases
1. to leave, esp. when stealthily or secretly.
press cutting in Passing Eng. of the Victorian Era (1909) 56/2: When your burick gets boozed, smashes the crockery, and then calls in her blooming old ma to protect her from your cruelty, that’s the time to do a guy. | ||
Leicester Chron. 28 June 12/4: You’re the chap as did the guy from Woking [prison] that foggy afternoon. | ||
Sporting Times 11 Jan. 1: Then as words were ruling high, the other lady ‘did a guy’ / Having been extremely busy in the interim. | ‘An Interim Injunction’||
🎵 Over the walls he will gaily climb, / Capture the swag, ‘do the guy’ sublime. | [perf. Harry Castling] ‘As his father did before him’||
Scarlet City 89: Hook it — do a guy, if you don’t want to be known. | ||
Sydney Sportsman (Surry Hills, NSW) 8 Jan. 1/5: It is understood that the enterprising gentleman’s ‘clerk’ had ducked his nut the moment he cooked the copper coming, and done a guy at a shade outside 2½ yards worse than evens. | ||
Fact’ry ’Ands 54: The Perfesser, seein’ me goin’ t’ waste, done a guy. | ||
Illus. Police News 12 Oct. 12/3: ‘I’ll do a guy out of the infernal Mother Country and never return!’. | Shadows of the Night in||
Truth (Sydney) 15 Dec. 7/6: Cuddlin’ backward in a doorway, / Same as if she’d done a guy / From a copper. | ||
‘The Crusaders’ in Chisholm (1951) 81: ‘Buzz off!’ ’e orders. So we done a guy. | ||
Sporting Times 267: Now, Joe [...] it’s high time we did a guy. | ||
No Hiding Place! 190/2: He’s done a Guy. He’s gone away . | ||
, | DAS. | |
Lingo 147: Cheats when discovered usually had need to run quickly away, a practice that generated such arresting terms as guy-a-whack, do a guy, clear out and shirock. |
2. to escape.
Answers 6 Apr. 297: They all dispersed at once – to put it in their own language, they did a guy [F&H]. | ||
Sporting Times 25 Jan. 1/3: [He] is ready to plank down anybody else’s money against [...] anybody doing a midnight guy quicker than he can. |
3. to take a false name.
Fun 23 Mar. 125: [...] they’ll all be doing guys (giving false names!) [F&H]. | ||
DSUE (8th edn) 317/1: 1887; † 1910. |
4. to absent oneself from work without asking permission.
Absent-Minded Mule and Verses 7: He is here on active service, and he’s been and done a guy. | ‘The Absent-Minded Mule’ in
1. to run away from, to ‘give the slip’.
DSUE (1984) 516/2: —1899. |
2. (US, also give someone the G) to make a fool of someone, to tease.
Lantern (N.O.) 22 Jan. 3: When I pass out that way, dey are all givin’ me de guy. | ||
Cockney Dialect and Sl. 92: Give ’em de ol’ G ‘tell them a lie’. |