gopher
go‧pher/ˈɡəʊfə $ ˈɡoʊfər/ noun [COUNTABLE] Sense 1: [date : 1700-1800; Origin : Perhaps from Canadian French gaufre 'honeycomb'] 1. a North and Central American animal like a large rat that lives in holes in the ground
2. (also Gopher) trademark a computer program that helps people find and use information quickly on the Internet
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Gophers, rather: moles would be gophers here. ▪ An adult owl will normally gobble about one gopher or two mice a night, experts say. ▪ For instance, many colleges, universities and government agencies store on-line information using a system called gopher. ▪ The ramparts are also popular among gophers and ground squirrels, whose Byzantine burrows are often a key culprit in levee breaks. ▪ There are dozens of gopher computers out there, full of valuable data and open to the public. ▪ With gophers, he searches for small mounds. ▪ You can find it, along with a great many other political documents, at a gopher called Internet Wiretap.
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