Some African and Gullah words became part of the American language, including goober, yam, okra and tote. |
|
He's a bit of a goober, on the page an adorable one, deep in heartsickness. |
|
Read ingredient lists carefully and learn to identify other names for peanuts, such as goober nuts. |
|
Mr. Schulman's job is to be credulous, the true-love goober with a 5 o'clock shadow. |
|
I'd much rather work with crazy, driven nerdlingers, even if they get the occasional goober on their report card. |
|
What goober lacks in intelligence he makes up for in impersonations. |
|
Or bustin' sugar rocks in a sunny field of goober peas in the dead silence of an Alabama summer. |
|
I know it's a little extra legwork, but you need to go back in time, slap on a fake moustache, sneak into the studio audience at Tavis Smiley, and throw pebbles at your past self's face until he remembers not to be a goober. |
|
Outside of the movie store, was dancing on the sidewalk like a goober to make my sister laugh. |
|
A goober told me it's ok for a moo to boobfeed in a pool because the chlorine will kill any germs. |
|
Consumed throughout the world, peanuts, also called groundnuts, goober and goober pea, are one of the favorite foods of mankind. |
|
Being a bird hunter doesn't require you to dress like a goober. |
|
You almost feel sorry for these guys, as it's hard to solidify your appeal to religious zealots while at the same time trying not to sound like a hopeless goober. |
|
After gomer leaves Mayberry to join the Marines, Goober shocks his cousin with a surprise visit to the military base. |
|
The red girl meets Blue Betty, Pink Patty Puff, Brown Bobby Bongo, Green Goober Gruff, Yellow Yasmina and Orange O'Shea. |
|
Goober Pyle and his happy go-lucky cousin Gomer offered endless hours of comic relief on The Andy Griffith Show. |
|
Ina Goober, whom I admitted six times last year. A gomer, or rather, the feminine, gomere. |
|
This book sets out the history of the peanut, or Goober pea, in an accessible way with a language and layout targeted more at the layman than the scholar. |
|