English edit

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Etymology edit

From Middle English gounde, gownde, from Old English gund (matter, pus, poison), from Proto-West Germanic *gund, from Proto-Germanic *gundaz (sore, boil), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰendʰ- (ulcer, sore, abscess, boil). Cognate with Old High German gunt (purulent matter), dialectal Norwegian gund (the scab of an ulcer).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

gound (uncountable)

  1. (UK dialectal) Mucus produced by the eyes during sleep.
    • 2002, Peter Novobatzky, Ammon Shea, Depraved and Insulting English:
      Typical terms invented to fill this vacuum include sleepies, eye-snot, and bed-boogers. The correct word, however, is gound. "Collin was never one to dillydally in the morning: by the time he had rubbed the gound out of his eyes he was usually on his third Manhattan."
    • 2004, Bart King, Chris Sabatino, The Big Book of Boy Stuff:
      Your eyes get dried mucus in them while you sleep. The stuff is sometimes called bed-boogers or eye-snot, but to be accurate, it is "gound".
    • 2016, Darla Duhaime, Gross Body Stuff, page 16:
      Your eyes have their own goo, too. You know that crud in the corners of your eyes when you first wake up? It's a type of rheum called gound. When you're awake, you blink away the gound.
    • 2017, Carol Ann Rinzler, Spare Parts: In Praise of Your Appendix and Other Unappreciated Organs:
      While you sleep, however, your rheum bundles detritus such as dust, blood cells, skin cells, and mucus into gound, the gummy yellow-y stuff sometimes known as “sleep” []
  2. (UK dialectal) Gummy matter in sore eyes.

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