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gopher (n.)

burrowing squirrel, 1812, American English, perhaps an Englishing of Louisiana French gaufre "honeycomb, waffle," said to have been used by French settlers in reference to small mammals on analogy of the structure of their burrows, from Old French gaufre, walfre (12c.), which is from Frankish or some other Germanic source. The rodent was the nickname of people from Arkansas (1845) and later Minnesota (1872). The gopherwood tree of the Bible (used by Noah to make the ark, Genesis vi.14) is unrelated; it is from Hebrew gofer, name of a kind of wood now unidentified, perhaps meaning the cypress.

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Definitions of gopher from WordNet
1
gopher (n.)
a zealously energetic person (especially a salesman);
Synonyms: goffer
gopher (n.)
any of various terrestrial burrowing rodents of Old and New Worlds; often destroy crops;
Synonyms: ground squirrel / spermophile
gopher (n.)
burrowing rodent of the family Geomyidae having large external cheek pouches; of Central America and southwestern North America;
Synonyms: pocket gopher / pouched rat
gopher (n.)
burrowing edible land tortoise of southeastern North America;
Synonyms: gopher tortoise / gopher turtle / Gopherus polypemus
2
Gopher (n.)
a native or resident of Minnesota;
Synonyms: Minnesotan
From wordnet.princeton.edu