geezer

[ UK /ɡˈiːzɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a man who is (usually) old and/or eccentric
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How To Use geezer In A Sentence

  • No way am I hauling some old geezer's new dresser when I've got some serious celebrating to do.
  • Inspired by an uninvited muse two days before le jour de l'action de grace, this geezer rolled up his sleeves, cleared a crowded kitchen counter, and proceeded to create deux pain complet weighing at least two pounds each. Potiron - French Word-A-Day
  • He's a dapper little geezer. Times, Sunday Times
  • The original Essex geezers of electro-pop have a tremendous new album, an impressive array of emotional scars and a re-invigorated lust for life to discuss.
  • I kept passing geezers on very expensive bikes with their heads down, giving it their all (although all of them responded well to my friendly nod).
  • But this is not the case with mean old Ebenezer Scrooge, whose first name chimes with "squeezer" as well as with "geezer," whose last name is a combination of "screw" and "gouge," and whose author disapproves mightily of his ways: Debtor's Prism
  • I was in Camden today and I came across this street ‘entertainer’ who would challenge the pan pipe geezers when it comes to the irritability factor.
  • Third round'This old geezer might have a chance. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's a very slippery slope between ‘productive veteran’ and ‘washed-up geezer.’
  • And she left him standing there feeling like a decrepit old geezer because he didn't have any body art. The Sun
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