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hookey    
n. 逃學者
vt. 偷
a. 多鉤的

逃學者偷多鉤的

Hockey \Hock"ey\, n. [From {Hook}, n.]
1. A game in which two parties of players, armed with sticks
curved or hooked at the end, attempt to drive any small
object (as a ball or a bit of wood) toward opposite goals.
[1913 Webster]

2. The stick used by the players. [Written also {hookey} and
{hawkey}.]
[1913 Webster]


Hookey \Hook"ey\, n.
1. See {Hockey}.
[1913 Webster]

2. Same as {hooky}, n..
[1913 Webster]


Hooky \Hook"y\ (h[oo^]k"[y^]), n. [Written also {hookey}.] [Cf.
{Hook}, v. t., 3.]
A word used only in the expression to play hooky, to be
truant, to run away; -- used mostly of youths absent from
school without a valid reason and without the knowledge of
their parents. Also (figuratively and jocosely), to be absent
from duty for frivolous reasons.
[Webster 1913 Suppl. PJC]

This talk about boys . . . playing ball, and "hooky,"
and marbles, was all moonshine. --F. Hopkinson
Smith.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]

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英文字典中文字典相關資料:
  • What is the origin of the phrase playing hooky?
    The suggestion that hookey derives from Hookies (a denigrating term for Amish people) is intriguing, but it suffers from the fact that the term Hookie Hookey is not recorded in the sense of "Amish" until fairly late—the earliest Google Books match is from 1965 Earlier dictionaries list "Hook and Eye Baptist" (as early as 1894) "Hook and Eye
  • What is the origin of the phrase hunky dory?
    Nobody really knows There's no agreed derivation of the expression 'hunky-dory' It is American and the earliest example of it in print that I have found is from a collection of US songs, George Christy's Essence of Old Kentucky, 1862
  • etymology - What is origin of the phrase tits up - English Language . . .
    'Tits Up' was in common usage in the British Armed Forces, post WW2 It may have originated earlier The common consensus was that it originated in the Royal Navy
  • etymology - What is the origin of cattywampus - English Language . . .
    He frisked his caudality around in a lively manner, and seemed as self-sufficient as if he had played "hookey" from school in entire week without having been detected But the meaning of catawampus here isn't entirely clear—it may mean "dangerously or insolently," rather than "obliquely "





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