Learn English – the origin of the word “geroff”

etymologyorigin-unknownslang

I am not a native speaker so never had a chance to meet the term in the wild, and only seen it in Harry Potter series mostly used by Ron Weasley.

My somewhat corrupted mind assumed it being a shortened version of "bugger off" but recently I've found sources claiming it is somewhat originating from "get off". It sounds more plausible but is there a linguistic rule that describes such a transformation?

Best Answer

but recently I've found sources claiming it is somewhat originating from "get off".

This is true, although it is not "somewhat", it is "entirely". https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gerroff#English and https://www.hp-lexicon.org/thing/geroff/

It is can be written as "Gerroff" as the pronunciation may include a slight "r" sound in the first part and a more noticeable one in the second part - "Ger'roff" - /gɛ(r)rof/

Gerroff is a phonetic spelling of "get off" when spoken quickly and/or in an annoyed manner.

Is there a linguistic rule that describes such a transformation?

"phonetic spelling".