Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Any of various short-tailed, burrowing rodents of the family Geomyidae of North America, having fur-lined external cheek pouches.
- noun Any of various ground squirrels of North American prairies.
from The Century Dictionary.
- In mining, to begin or carry on mining operations at haphazard, or on a small scale; mine without any reference to the possibility of future permanent development. Such mine-openings are frequently called
gopher-holes and coyote-holes. - noun One of the pouched rats or pocket-gophers, sundry species of the rodent family Geomyidœ and genera Geomys and Thomomys. See these words, and cut under
Geomyidæ . - noun One of the spermophiles, burrowing squirrels, or ground-squirrels of the family Sciuridœ, subfamily Spermophilinœ, and genera Cynomys, Spermophilus, and Tamias.
- noun The Testudo (or Xerobates) carolina, a tortoise from 12 to 15 inches long, of gregarious nocturnal and fossorial habits, abundant in the southern Atlantic States.
- noun A snake, Spilote scouperi. Also called
gopher snake . - noun In some parts of the southern United States, a plow.
- noun A kind of waffle. See
gofer .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Zoöl.) One of several North American burrowing rodents of the genera Geomys and Thomomys, of the family
Geomyidæ ; -- called alsopocket gopher andpouched rat . Seepocket gopher , andtucan . - noun One of several western American species of the genus Spermophilus, of the family
Sciuridæ ; as, the gray gopher (Spermophilus Franklini ) and the striped gopher (S. tridecemlineatus ); -- called alsostriped prairie squirrel ,leopard marmot , andleopard spermophile . SeeSpermophile . - noun A large land tortoise (
Testudo Carilina ) of the Southern United States, which makes extensive burrows. - noun A large burrowing snake (
Spilotes Couperi ) of the Southern United States. - noun (Mining) an irregular prospecting drift, following or seeking the ore without regard to regular grade or section.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A small burrowing
rodent , especially in the family Geomyidae - noun The
gopher tortoise - noun Alternative spelling of
gofer .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun burrowing edible land tortoise of southeastern North America
- noun burrowing rodent of the family Geomyidae having large external cheek pouches; of Central America and southwestern North America
- noun any of various terrestrial burrowing rodents of Old and New Worlds; often destroy crops
- noun a native or resident of Minnesota
- noun a zealously energetic person (especially a salesman)
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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I. Description Several vulnerabilities have been identified in UMN UNI. gopher and gopher+ when configured as a server or public access client.
CA-93:11 CERT Advisory UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ Vulnerabilities 1993
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If you have further questions regarding UMN UNIX gopher or gopher+ software, send e-mail to: gopher@boombox. micro.umn.edu
CA-93:11 CERT Advisory UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ Vulnerabilities 1993
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The CERT Coordination Center has received information concerning vulnerabilities in versions of the UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ server and client available before August 6, 1993.
CA-93:11 CERT Advisory UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ Vulnerabilities 1993
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New versions of the UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ software have been released that provide bug fixes and correct these security problems.
CA-93:11 CERT Advisory UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ Vulnerabilities 1993
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We strongly recommend that any site using versions of UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ dated prior to August 6, 1993 (including version 1.12, 1. 12s,
CA-93:11 CERT Advisory UMN UNIX gopher and gopher+ Vulnerabilities 1993
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The term gopher wood appears only in the Flood account (thereby making it a hapax legomenon), and thus the Bible gives few clues to its actual meaning.
CreationWiki - Recent changes [en] Ashcraft 2010
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The term gopher in this case does not refer to any of the various species of western rodents, but to a burrowing land turtle (Xerobates polyphemus), which can be found on the lower Coastal plain.
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This is completely unjustified, because the meaning of the Hebrew word gopher is unknown.
Modern Science in the Bible Ben Hobrink 2011
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This is completely unjustified, because the meaning of the Hebrew word gopher is unknown.
Modern Science in the Bible Ben Hobrink 2011
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This is completely unjustified, because the meaning of the Hebrew word gopher is unknown.
Modern Science in the Bible Ben Hobrink 2011
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