hoot
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L16934 on Wikidata ↗verb
- make hooting sound
interjection
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L334043 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /huːt/ / /hʉːt/ / [hïɯt]
name
- A surname.
noun
Etymology: A variant of utu (influenced by etymology 1), borrowed from Māori utu (“payment, revenge, payback”).
- Money, especially in the form of cash given as payment.
“On the construction you could make a pot of hoot in no time. You oughter be able to get two or three quid a day when things is busy.”
verb
Etymology: From Middle English houten, huten, hoten, of North Germanic origin, from or related to Old Swedish huta (“to cast out in contempt”), related to Middle High German hiuzen, hūzen (“to call to pursuit”), Swedish hut! (“begone!”, interjection), Dutch hui (“ho, hallo”), Danish huj (“ho, hallo”).
- To cry out or shout in contempt.
“Matrons and girls shall hoot at thee no more,”
- To make a hoo, the cry of an owl.
“The clamorous owl that nightly hoots and wonders / At our quaint spirits.”
“Outside an owl was hooting most dismally in the darkness. The villa was on a by-road, and there was no human sound to link them up with life.”
- To assail with contemptuous cries or shouts; to follow with derisive shouts.
“Mary felt extremely offended when the workers hooted at her.”
“And I will be content, that Partridge, and the rest of his Clan, may hoot me for a Cheat and Impostor, if I fail in any single Particular of Moment.”
- To sound the horn of a vehicle.
“When you arrive to pick me up, hoot, and I'll come outside.”