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    Gold brick
    /ˈɡōl(d) ˌbrik/

    noun

    • 1. a thing that looks valuable but is in fact worthless.

    verb

    • 1. invent excuses to avoid a task; shirk: "he wasn't goldbricking; he was really sick"
  2. Back in the 1850s, a gold brick was just that — a brick-shaped block of gold that had been cast at a mine for easy transport away. A writer in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine in 1888 described a gold brick cast in Montana as being “a trifle larger than the common clay brick”, but weighing nearly 32 pounds (roughly 14.5 kg). But as a ...

  3. Sep 6, 2014 · The term has an interesting story. From the “the celebrated gold brick swindle” of October 1879, the term took on a different meaning. It is currently used mainly with as a noun meaning shirker and as a verb meaning to swindle. As noted, its usage has been decreasing in recent decades. Goldbrick : (www.merriam-webster.com) Noun

  4. 1890s. The earliest known use of the verb gold-brick is in the 1890s. OED's earliest evidence for gold-brick is from 1893, in Times & Reg. (U.S.). It is also recorded as a noun from the 1820s. gold-brick is formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: gold brick n. See etymology.

  5. Jul 6, 2023 · Originally titled ‘Cash,’ Netflix’s ‘Gold Brick’ is a French comedy–drama film directed by Jérémie Rozan that follows protagonist Daniel Sauveur’s rags-to-riches journey in the Parisian luxury fragrance industry. In the middle of nowhere in the city of Chartres, Daniel, a kid from a low-income family, grows up detesting the Breuils, the town’s wealthiest business family. […]

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    • Etymology
    • Noun
    • Verb

    From gold +‎ brick, originally (1850s) an actual gold ingot or brick, later a swindle that consisted of selling a putative gold brick, which was only coated in gold. The swindle is attested from 1879, the sense “to swindle” is attested 1902, and the sense “to shirk” is attested 1914, popularized as World War I armed forces slang.In early 1900s, use...

    goldbrick (plural goldbricks) 1. Something fraudulent or nonexistent offered for sale; a swindle or con. 1.1. 1920, F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Smart Set, January 1920, collected in Tales of the Jazz Age: 1.1.1. Experience is the biggest gold brickin the world. All older people have it for sale. 1.2. 1932, Rafael De Nogales, Memoirs Of A Soldier Of Fo...

    goldbrick (third-person singular simple present goldbricks, present participle goldbricking, simple past and past participle goldbricked) 1. (US, slang, dated) To shirk or malinger. 1.1. 1961 November 10, Joseph Heller, “The Soldier in White”, in Catch-22[…], New York, N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, →OCLC, page 173: 1.1.1. I'd just as soon goldbrickwith...

  7. Goldbrick definition: a brick made to look like gold, sold by a swindler.. See examples of GOLDBRICK used in a sentence.

  8. Goldbrick definition: A person, especially a soldier, who avoids assigned duties or work; a shirker.

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