27 May 2016 – galoot

27 May 2016

galoot or galloot

[guh-loot]

noun, Slang.

1. an awkward, eccentric, or foolish person.

Origin of galoot

1805-1815; origin uncertain

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for galoot

Historical Examples

They can stand right up here and tell me to my face that I’m a galoot and a liar and a hick!
Babbitt
Sinclair Lewis

I want you to forget about that—this morning, and not think I am a galoot and a mucker.
The Octopus
Frank Norris

Why, thars been a galoot around Tintacker ever since Spring opened.
Ruth Fielding at Silver Ranch
Alice B. Emerson

Jim was all fixed up, and he says to the galoot, ‘Let’s have a throw.’
The Crisis, Complete
Winston Churchill

By the taste in my mouth and the feel of my wrists, that galoot must have tied me up and gagged me!
Dorothy Dixon and the Mystery Plane
Dorothy Wayne

Anagram

too lag
to goal


Today’s quote
If you’ve been brutally broken but still have the courage to be gentle to others then you deserve a love deeper than the ocean itself.

– Nathan Gill


On this day

27 May – 3 June – National Reconciliation Week, which is celebrated in Australia every year on these dates. The dates commemorate two significant milestones in the reconciliation journey — the anniversaries of the successful 1967 referendum (27 May) and the High Court Mabo decision (3 June 1992). The 1967 referendum saw over 90 per cent of Australians vote to give the Commonwealth the power to make laws for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and recognise them in the national census. On 3 June, 1992, the High Court of Australia delivered its landmark Mabo decision which legally recognised that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have a special relationship to the land—that existed prior to colonalisation and still exists today. This recognition paved the way for land rights called Native Title. 2012 marked the 20th anniversary of the Mabo decision. http://www.reconciliation.org.au/nrw

27 May 1703 – Tsar Peter the Great founds the Russian city of St Petersburg.

27 May 1907 – bubonic plague breaks out in San Francisco.

27 May 1911 – birth of Vincent Price, American actor, starred in a number of horror films, including House of Wax, House of Usher and The Raven. He also acted in the 1960s television series Batman, in which he played the evil mastermind, Egghead; a master criminal with a fixation on eggs. Price provided a voice-over on Alice Cooper’s 1975 album Welcome to My Nightmare. In 1976, Price recorded a cover version of Bobby Pickett song, Monster Mash. Died 25 October 1993.

27 May 1922 – birth of Christopher Lee, CBE, English actor and singer. Lee starred in hammer horror movies, including Dracula (in which he played the title character), Dracula has risen from the grave, Taste the Blood of Dracula, and Scars of Dracula. Fearing that he would become type-cast in horror roles as had happened to Vincent Price and Peter Cushing, he went in search of other roles. Lee starred in the 1974 James Bond film, The Man with the Golden Gun. He played Saruman in Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit trilogies, and Count Dooku in two of the Star Wars prequel films, Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith. Died 7 June 2015.

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