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English

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Etymology

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From gonna (contraction of going to) +‎ be, modelled after wannabe.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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gonnabe (plural gonnabes)

  1. (informal) One who is on the path to becoming famous or important.
    • 2006, Linda Alice Dewey, “Acknowledgements”, in Aaron’s Crossing: An Inspiring True Ghost Story, Charlottesville, Va.: Hampton Roads Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 206:
      I attribute any success I have to the following educators in my life: New York agent Jim Cypher [] early on taught me that the difference between “wannabes” and “gonnabes” is persistence; []
    • 2007 August 6, Kelefa Sanneh, “Punk on parade, with flexible marching orders”, in The New York Times[1], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-11-26:
      Alkaline Trio, New Found Glory, Coheed and Cambria, the Starting Line: all have struggled to meet high expectations, and maybe some of them were relieved to be playing this summer’s Warped Tour, nestled among the wannabes and gonnabes.
    • 2014, Tom Pease, “Touring Entrepreneurship Land and Meriting Citizenship: You Can’t Give What You Don’t Have”, in Small Business Survival 101: Principles for Fail Proofing Your Business, New York, N.Y.: Morgan James Publishing, →ISBN, page 22:
      It is doubtful you could instruct Babe Ruth into being a home run king or Usain Bolt into world’s fastest human. They just have something. You can throw money at a wannabe but that won’t make him a gonnabe.
    • 2022, Polly Hamilton Hilsabeck, American Blues [][2], Berkeley, Calif.: She Writes Press, →ISBN:
      'So you're a wannabe?' / 'Hopefully, a gonnabe.'

Translations

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See also

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