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[ US /ˈɡusi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having or revealing stupidity
    some fool idea about rewriting authors' books
    a dopey answer
    a dopey kid
    ridiculous anserine behavior

How To Use goosey In A Sentence

  • I was so excited to listen to your reflections that I actually got goosey and a bit teary all at once.
  • They maintain that taking proper scent control measures will help keep deer from getting goosey, and that many, many bucks are not flash-shy at all. Camera-Shy Deer?
  • Maybe this is just the kind of loosey-goosey coach who should scare the bejeebers out of the Chicago Bears. Playoffs? Playoffs? Pete Carroll answers a reporter's phone during press conference
  • No more "pick-a-pay" ARMs that were mass-marketed with loosey-goosey underwriting and negative amortization. ARM is making comeback -- and could save arm and a leg
  • Surprisingly, GOP has some sane ones who can engender a marriage between hard-line ultra-right wingers, and loosey-goosey liberals, and take a middle course, until atleast the problem is being addressed. Crist announces big fundraising haul
  • Arlen started out loosey-goosey, sure he could get `er done. TISHOMINGO BLUES
  • So tense were her nerves on such occasions that she turned what is called "goosey" with the feel of the evaded fingers. Nocturne
  • Its advocates describe it as a view that moral standards are grounded in social custom, varying from culture to culture, while its critics call it loosey-goosey moralism incapable of deciding that such institutions as slavery are wrong. The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • Without a concrete plan to revisit, "loosey goosey" intentions are hard to enforce and all that is left is resentment and anger between parent and child. Carole Bennett, MA: Talking To Your Kids About Drugs: 4 Healthy Concepts To Consider
  • So a lot of our ‘friends’ in the region are very, very goosey about what that means for them.
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