gomer
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Etymology 1
From Latin gomor in the Vulgate, from Ancient Greek γομόρ (gomór) in the Septuagint, from Hebrew עומר ('ómer, “sheaf; unit of dry measure”).
Noun
gomer (plural gomers)
- (historical units of measure, archaic) Alternative form of omer: a former Hebrew unit of dry volume equal to about 2.3 L or 2.1 quarts.
- 1801, Thomas Coke, A Commentary on the Holy Bible, page 20:
- On the morrow, the 16th, after having offered to God the homer, they began eating the corn of the country; and the 17th the manna ceased to fall from heaven. What supports this calculation is, that the gomer, or sheaf, was offered the 16th of Nisan, in broad day-light, though pretty late.
Etymology 2
After Louis-Gabriel de Gomer, the French artillery officer who invented the design. Attested in English since the early nineteenth century.
Noun
gomer (plural gomers)
Etymology 3
Likely from the oafish fictional character Gomer Pyle from the 1960s American sitcom The Andy Griffith Show.
Noun
gomer (plural gomers)
- (slang, derogatory) A stupid, awkward, or oafish person.
- 2005, Ralph Hardy, Lefty, iUniverse, published 2004, →ISBN, page 25:
- “Lordy Jeezus,” he said out loud. When did he become such a gomer?
- 2007, Brian McDaniel, Walt Disney World: The Full Report, iUniverse, published 2007, →ISBN, page 147:
- Okay, you wanted to go to the Big Apple, but didn't want to sit in traffic or feel like a country hic, as you stare up at all 'dem big buildins'. Try Universal Studios Florida's version of New York, where you can stare at all the fake big buildings all you want and not feel like a total Gomer.
- 2008, Julie Johnson Oliver, I've Been 16 for 34 Years, Groveland Branch Press, published 2008, →ISBN, page 72:
- Everyone will have to guess who I want to dance with tonight, I thought. I'm not giving myself away to this bunch of gomers. That would be way too embarrassing.
- (US, military slang, derogatory) An inept trainee or serviceperson.
- (US, military slang) An opponent in combat or in training.
Synonyms
- (a stupid person): See Thesaurus:idiot.
Hyponyms
Etymology 4
Uncertain. Perhaps the same as, or influenced by Etymology 3, above. It is frequently claimed that the word is an acronym for "grand old man of the emergency room", or for "Get Out of My ER", the latter story popularized by the 1978 novel The House of God by Samuel Shem. John Algeo (1991) notes that various people claim the word is an acronym or is borrowed from Hebrew G-M-R (“finish; complete”), but suggests that these accounts are dubious. He concludes that a connection to Gomer Pyle or to the "stupid, awkward person" sense of the word is the most likely source. The Oxford English Dictionary online (2003) likewise treats the "undesirable patient" and "stupid person" senses as uses of the same word.
Noun
gomer (plural gomers)
- (medical slang, derogatory) An undesirable hospital patient, or a patient who does not need medical care.
- That patient is a total GOMER. Turf him and let's get some lunch.
- 1976, Stephen Charles Frankel, Emergency Medical Care in an Urban Area, page 118:
- Mumford (1970) noted that the terms ‘crock’, ‘gomer’, and ‘turkey’, were sometimes utilized by interns to designate different types of undesirable patients, and sometimes used synonymously. At Bayview, gomer was the preferred term
- (slang, derogatory) A dirty, senile, or otherwise unpleasant patient.
- 2001, David Thomasma, Thomasine Kimbrough Kushner, Ward Ethics: Dilemmas for Medical Students and Doctors in Training, page 163:
- It was 3:00 a.m. and an elderly homeless person had just been admitted to the emergency room. [...] One resident seemed tired and angry and said, "I can't believe we got beeped out of bed for this gomer."
- (slang, informal) A patient who does not respond to medical treatment.
- 1985, Deborah B. Leiderman, Jean-Anne Grisso, “The gomer phenomenon”, in Journal of Health and Social Behavior, page 225:
- The number of problems the two groups of patients presented to physicians was comparable; however, the pattern of their hospital stays contrasted dramatically. Gomer patients remained in the hospital longer than other patients, and had more consultations for diagnosis and therapy, and posed more diagnostic and therapeutic dilemmas for the physicians who cared for them.
References
- Samuel Shem (1978) The House of God, New York: Dell.
- John Algeo (1991) Fifty Years Among the New Words, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- “gomer, n3.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, March 2003.