See also: Woz, woź, wóź, wóz, and wōz

English edit

Etymology edit

From was, wuz.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

woz

  1. Eye dialect spelling of was.
    • 1893, Bret Harte, Susy: A Story of the Plains:
      "You woz saying," said the farmer, with slow, matter of fact, New England deliberation, "ez how you guessed you woz beguiled amongst the Injins by your Mexican partner, a pow'ful influential man, and yet you woz the only one escaped the gen'ral slarterin'.
    • 1894, George Egerton, Discords[1], page 120:
      'If she woz mine' - tapping a brick - 'I'd bash 'er 'ed in!'
    • 2002, Christopher Brookmyre, Country of the Blind[2], →ISBN, page 343:
      We woz robbed, Brian.

Quotations edit

Derived terms edit

Haitian Creole edit

Etymology edit

From French rose (pink).

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

woz

  1. pink

Lower Sorbian edit

Noun edit

woz m inan (diminutive wozyk)

  1. Superseded spelling of wóz.

Declension edit

Verb edit

woz

  1. Superseded spelling of wóz.