GOSSIPS - significado y definición. Qué es GOSSIPS
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Qué (quién) es GOSSIPS - definición

IDLE TALK OR RUMOR, ESPECIALLY ABOUT PERSONAL OR PRIVATE AFFAIRS OF OTHERS
Gossips; Workplace gossip; Cattiness; Tattle; Office gossip; Gossipping
  • ''The Friendly Gossips'' (1901) by [[Eugene de Blaas]]
  • war poster]] conveys the message: "Don't chatter! Gossiping borders on [[treason]]" (1941).
  • ''One winds on the distaff what the other spins'']] (Both spread gossip) by [[Pieter Bruegel the Elder]]

Gossip         
Gossip is idle talk or rumour, especially about the personal or private affairs of others; the act is also known as dishing or tattling.
gossip         
¦ noun
1. casual conversation or unsubstantiated reports about other people.
2. chiefly derogatory a person who likes talking about other people's private lives.
¦ verb (gossips, gossiping, gossiped) engage in gossip.
Derivatives
gossiper noun
gossipy adjective
Word History
A gossip was originally a rather more serious and worthy person than they are now. In Old English the word was spelled godsibb and meant 'godfather or godmother', literally 'a person related to one in God'; it came from sibb 'a relative', the source of sibling. In medieval times a gossip was 'a close friend, a person with whom one gossips', hence 'a person who gossips', later (early 19th century) 'casual conversation about other people'.
gossip         
(gossips, gossiping, gossiped)
1.
Gossip is informal conversation, often about other people's private affairs.
There has been much gossip about the possible reasons for his absence...
Don't you like a good gossip?
N-UNCOUNT: also a N
2.
If you gossip with someone, you talk informally, especially about other people or local events. You can also say that two people gossip.
We spoke, debated, gossiped into the night...
Eva gossiped with Sarah...
Mrs Lilywhite never gossiped.
V-RECIP: pl-n V, V with n, V (non-recip)
3.
If you describe someone as a gossip, you mean that they enjoy talking informally to people about the private affairs of others.
He was a vicious gossip.
N-COUNT [disapproval]

Wikipedia

Gossip

Gossip is idle talk or rumour, especially about the personal or private affairs of others; the act is also known as dishing or tattling.

Gossip is a topic of research in evolutionary psychology, which has found gossip to be an important means for people to monitor cooperative reputations and so maintain widespread indirect reciprocity. Indirect reciprocity is a social interaction in which one actor helps another and is then benefited by a third party. Gossip has also been identified by Robin Dunbar, an evolutionary biologist, as aiding social bonding in large groups.

Ejemplos de uso de GOSSIPS
1. Malicious gossips apart, everyone appears to agree with my wife.
2. Or as politically motivated gossips on our sleazier websites have suggested, 17.
3. Gossips are convinced that the software group‘s figures will not disappoint the City.
4. Finally, gossips hinted that a US predator may be circling Epic Group, unchanged at 66.5p.
5. Gossips reckon a fund raising could also accompany Ashtead‘s full–year figures, due next month.