HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of goldie | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2 Standard

Definitions

  1. A female given name from English for a girl with golden hair, mostly American usage around 1900. It was further popularized by actress Goldie Hawn
  2. Something which is golden in color.
  3. A male or female given name from English for a golden-colored dog or bird
  4. The golden eagle.
    UK
  5. A surname.
  6. The golden plover.
    UK
  7. A town in the Shire of Macedon Ranges, central Victoria, Australia
  8. The goldfinch.
  9. A goldfish.
    informal
  10. A Golden Retriever.
    informal

Examples

“You'd expect the rainbows and possibly the browns, but not the blues and the goldies, which can look truly spectacular.”
“The coupons were called greenies, brownies, and goldies. A bicycle could be gotten for 500 goldies. Neither Ray nor I ever acquired a bicycle. But I accumulated a cigar box full of greenies, brownies and a few goldies.”
“We began by experimenting in the Greyston kitchen during the night. We made brownies, goldies, coffee cakes […]”
“Young "baldies" look just like "goldies" and are often shot by mistake.”
“[…] the golden eagle is the champion predator. And the most handsome, according to ornithologists, who affectionately call their subjects "goldies".”
“Golden eagles took up old eyries on Hebridean sea cliffs only after the white-tailed sea eagle became extinct. Goldies may hunt seabirds but never fish, and they always resort to flying inland for rabbits or hares as preferred prey.”
““Each time the golden plover moved, its dunlin attendant followed, but when the goldie flew off to land on a wooden post, it triggered a bizarre cameo.”
“Both grey and golden had the folk name "whistling plover" in Britain, but you know from the habitat that Burns must have had the goldie in mind in his line, The deep-toned plover gray, wild whistling on the hill”
“Dunlins, 'the plover's page', lay their eggs in wetter flows, usually those having a complex of small pools; we often watched the dunlins following the goldies.”
“I have tried Inga seed for canaries and goldfinches for three or four months, and can speak well of it. My birds, goldies especially, are very fond of it; these will pick it out and leave the canary seed, which they scarcely touch now.”
“Mr. Peter Scott, Lauder, related that Goldfinches were common in Lauderdale about forty-five years ago, and that their nests were sometimes found about that time in the grounds of Thirlestane Castle. The rocky deans near the sea-coast at Lamberton are also said to have been frequented by "Goldies" in former times, and they were likewise found about Fairneyside.”
“I'm not trying to defend house finches—I'm wooed by goldies' looks like every other feeder—and I certainly think that house finches eat far more seed than they deserve.”
“Outdoor ponds provide the perfect environment for goldies and Koi.”
“Incredibly, the reactions of the dogs differed between the instances. […] "It's the pursed lips that do it for me," said another comment: "My goldie used to do the same."”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See goldie used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course