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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- etymology - What is the origin of the term woo? - English Language . . .
Secondly, woo is the shortened form, and it is also written as woo-woo and woo woo Wiktionary says of its origin that it might be “intended to imitate the eerie background music of sci-fi horror films and television shows, however the exact origin is uncertain” Indeed, if you do a Google Books search for “woo woo”, all the hits refer
- How do you spell hoo-wee! - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Woo and woo-hoo (and variations like yahoo, yee-haw, and yippee) indicate excitement (Woot, also spelled w00t among an online in-crowd, is a probably ephemeral variant ) In the same vein, if you write it and it looks right in an echomimetic way, it probably will serve its purpose just fine, and only the most pedantic reader is going to lose
- single word requests - Verb to refer to people yelling wooh . . .
woo (w) v wooed, woo·ing, woos v tr 1 To seek the affection of with intent to romance 2 a To seek to achieve; try to gain b To tempt or invite 3 To entreat, solicit, or importune v intr To court a woman And realized it was not What's the correct word?
- Whats the origin of saying yoo hoo! to get someones attention?
A character in D H Lawrence's novel Women in Love (published 1920) calls out, "Shu-hu!" to hail her sister in a crowded place This must be the same as "yoo hoo" What is the source of this
- Cockney rhyming slang - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Tiddley Winky Woo is being used just to mean "like so" or as a flourish like we might say "ta-da" It's a reference to an old song It's a reference to an old song I'd not recommend a non-expert using the phrase these days as you could end up with a knuckle sandwich in the boat race, given later associations with homosexuality
- Are w o, w , b c common abbreviations in the US?
Both "w " and "w o" were common U S abbreviations in correspondence, and in tight spots on data tables, until recently
- verbs - What did make love mean in the 1920s? - English Language . . .
For more than four hundred years, to make love (to) had a more “courtly” meaning: “to pay amorous attention (to)”, “to court, woo”, according to the 1908 printing of the New English Dictionary (NED) Typical examples given in that work: 1605 [SHAKS ] Macb III i 124 Thence it is That I to your assistance doe make loue
- How to represent an English police siren sound in writing?
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