(interjection) | UK: /gɒk/ | US: /ɡɔk/, /ɡɑ k/ | (gôk)
A meaningless yet emotionally
loaded utterance used to release intensity, emphasis, or absurdity in place of a true expletive.
Commonly used grammatically as a singular
token, with variation in type form, tense, plurality, and
role per instance. Sentences structured entirely with ‘gock+’ lexeme is often referred to as “Gockian”.
Singular Lexicon Examples (‘loanword’),
1. Noun: “That concert was a gock.”
2. Past-participle: “Get gocked!”
3.
Verb: “My
cat’s full gocking it…”
4. Adjective: “I’m feeling gocky.”
5. Adverbial: “He shouted gockly at
us,”
6. Interjection: “Gock! I forgot my
keys”
7. Pejorative: “Listen here, you g*cker!”
Gockian Example,
“Gock gocking gocks gocky. Gocked gockering gockle gockgock. Gockies gock gockology, gockit!”