adverb General Slang

geet

· adverb · geordie

Geordie intensifier — very, really, dead.

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Definitions

1

Very, really, well — the Geordie intensifier you stick in front of an adjective to crank it up. Same job as 'dead' or 'proper' elsewhere in England.

“It's geet cold out, wrap up.”
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2

Often paired as 'geet walla' (very big / massive) — the full-Geordie version of 'huge'.

“He's got a geet walla new telly on the wall.”
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geet In A Sentence

It's geet cold out, wrap up.
He's got a geet walla new telly on the wall.

Origin & Usage

Believed to derive from 'great' — Northumbrian vowel shift doing its thing.

Variants geet wallagyet

People Also Ask

What does geet mean in Geordie slang?

Geet is a Geordie intensifier meaning very, really or dead.

How do you use geet in a sentence?

"That's geet good, that is."

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