gandu
See also: Gandu
English
Etymology 1
From Hindustani گانڈو / गांडू (gāṇḍū).
Noun
gandu (plural gandus)
- (India, vulgar, slang) An arsehole, an idiot.
- 2011, Farzana Doctor, Six Metres of Pavement, page 358:
- She was almost nice, or trying to be. But that Khushaal. What a gandu! A real ass!
- 2013, Manil Suri, The City of Devi, page 327:
- See—a gandu, nothing more, just like I said. Surely if it were a plot, they'd send a proper man.
- 2019, Anand Ranganathan, Chitra Subramaniam, The Rat Eater:
- This Khushaal—you haven't seen his photographs, have you sir? The ugliest gandu in town...
- 2020, Ranjay Chowdhury, Ram Khan: The Weird Wizard:
- That gandu has set men after me.
- (India, Pakistan, vulgar, slang, offensive) Someone who takes the passive role in anal sex.
- 1997, Hasan Mujtaba, Stephen O. Murray, Will Roscoe, Islamic Homosexualities: Culture, History, and Literature, page 31:
- He is less likely to be considered a gandu (since presumably he can satisfy himself carnally at will with his wife).
- 2001, Trikone - Volumes 16-18, page 20:
- Calling Nasim a gandu and declaring a jehad against gay Muslims, he allegedly lunged at Nasim while two restaurant employees tried to restrain him.
- 2011, Aatish Taseer, Noon: A Novel:
- 'I see you've put up a picture of Maggu Mahapatra and that gandu prince, what's his name, Tuttu...'
- 2012, Shobha De, Sethji:
- I am not here to disturb your honeymoon with that gandu-actor.
- 2015, Stanley I. Thangaraj, Desi Hoop Dreams, page 187:
- Mustafa renarrativized his heterosexuality by playing gay as a way to control and test how much of a "Gandu" or "Chakka" Khushaal was.
Alternative forms
- goondu (Singapore Colloquial English)
Derived terms
- librandu (Indian politics)
Noun
gandu (plural gandus)
- (West Africa) A work agreement usually involving a married man and his adult sons who take on responsibility for the fieldwork of a farm on which they all live.
- 1966, Dhara S. Gill, FAO Socio-economic Survey of Peasant Agriculture in Northern Nigeria, page 70:
- There are several variations in the organization of gandu in this area.
- 2005, Steven Pierce, Farmers and the State in Colonial Kano:
- He described a number of other possibilities, for example, that in the event of a father's death, brothers might continue the gandu, with the senior brother taking the father's position as head.
- 2014, Paul Clough, Morality and Economic Growth in Rural West Africa:
- Hill found that in Dorayi, few married sons left gandu. Fathers were reluctant to release married sons from gandu and seldom granted them gayauna.
Hausa
Etymology
From a Songhay word for "land".
Indonesian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡandu/
- Hyphenation: gan‧du
Noun
gandu (first-person possessive ganduku, second-person possessive gandumu, third-person possessive gandunya)
Noun
gandu (first-person possessive ganduku, second-person possessive gandumu, third-person possessive gandunya)
Etymology 3
Borrowed from Sundanese [Term?].
Classifier
gandu
- (dialectal) classifier word for cylindrical objects
Further reading
- “gandu” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Narungga
Ngadjuri
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