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Goth   /gɑθ/   Listen
noun
Goth  n.  
1.
(Ethnol.) One of an ancient Teutonic race, who dwelt between the Elbe and the Vistula in the early part of the Christian era, and who overran and took an important part in subverting the Roman empire. Note: Under the reign of Valens, they took possession of Dacia (the modern Transylvania and the adjoining regions), and came to be known as Ostrogoths and Visigoths, or East and West Goths; the former inhabiting countries on the Black Sea up to the Danube, and the latter on this river generally. Some of them took possession of the province of Moesia, and hence were called Moesogoths. Others, who made their way to Scandinavia, at a time unknown to history, are sometimes styled Suiogoths.
2.
One who is rude or uncivilized; a barbarian; a rude, ignorant person.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Goth" Quotes from Famous Books



... banket {that} was so delycate. How she was receyued & what chere she had {the}re And how euery god sat in his astate Is it thus q{uo}d attropos what in {the} deuyls date Well he sayd I se well how the game goth Ones yet for your sake shal I make ...
— The Assemble of Goddes • Anonymous

... have no more imagination than a turnip-top! You must possess the taste of a Goth or Vandal, to turn such noble lines into ...
— She and I, Volume 1 • John Conroy Hutcheson

... plum tree!" cried Lavendar. "My young Goth, hadn't you a moment's compunction? That beautiful, flowering thing, as your cousin called it; could you ...
— Robinetta • Kate Douglas Wiggin

... prolonged and elaborate and audacious burlesque of the early annals of New Amsterdam. The undaunted Goth of the legend who plucked the Roman senator by the beard was not a more ruthless iconoclast than this son of New Amsterdam, who drew its grave ancestors from venerable obscurity by flooding them with the cheerful light ...
— Literary and Social Essays • George William Curtis

... of a twofold character. The first, Christian and Latin, was found all over Europe, and made the protection and extension of knowledge, its chief object. The other was a more insular literature for each nation, and always in the language of the people. Theodoric the Goth, Charlemagne, and Alfred the Great, the chief patrons of the literature of their age, sought to carry on, side by side, and to improve, these two literatures, the Latin and the vernacular. They aimed to refine and educate ...
— The Interdependence of Literature • Georgina Pell Curtis


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