OED3: Gaga
slang.
Also ga-ga. [a. F. gaga a senile person; senile.]
adj. Doting, exhibiting senile decay; mad, 'dotty'; fatuous. Also as adv.
[1905 Daily Chron. 18 Mar. 8/6 'Ah, you English,' quoth Mr. De Vries not so
long ago, after a round of the London theatres, 'you like to laugh-ga-ga!'+
Is not that the pathetic cry of our present drama, 'Ga-ga!'] 1920 F. M. Ford
Let. 26 July (1965) 116 The V.G.F. [sc. Victorian Great Figure] must be
gaga! 1921 M. Baring Passing By 210 Sir Arthur is quite gaga and took me for
George the whole evening. 1926 E. Ferber Show Boat xix. 385 Nola darling,
you've just gone gaga, that's all. What do you mean by staying down there in
that wretched malarial heat! 1927 Sunday Express 13 Mar. 4 The conventional
pictures of a young man and a young woman looking 'ga-ga' at each other.
1929 W. J. Locke Ancestor Jorico xviii, 'But why did he leave the
half-million to his son, in his will?' 'Gaga, my dear Binkie. Just gaga.
Senile, if you'd like it better.' 1956 C. P. Snow Homecomings xvii. 116
Hiding behind his smoke~screen of platitudes like an amiable old man already
a bit ga-ga. 1961 A. Wilson Old Men at Zoo iii. 158 If Godmanchester was so
gaga that he blabbed like this, then our prospects were alarming.
n. A doting or senile person; a madman.
1938 S. Beckett Murphy xi. 240 Mr. Endon+the most biddable little gaga in
the entire institution. 1941 Koestler Scum of Earth 180 Couldn't understand
what he said.+ Disastrous old gaga.
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