释义 |
Definition of hootenanny in English: hootenannynounPlural hootenanniesˈhuːt(ə)ˌnaniˈhutnˌæni US informal An informal gathering with folk music. 〈非正式,主美〉民歌歌会 we invited friends to a hootenanny in our backyard as modifier hootenanny numbers Example sentencesExamples - I soon ingratiated myself and we had a hootenanny.
- While the presence of kazoos in the musical score indicates a perilously high level of zaniness, this hootenanny is worth a visit.
- So it's with a leaden heart that I find myself at the King's for my two daughters' annual hootenanny - Aladdin.
- And unlike the preceding White Album, the jumbled juxtaposition of forms - faux-blues toss-offs, stately piano ballads, folkie hootenannies - feels less like a band overflowing with inspired ideas than one running out of them.
- Also retro and old enough to have been there are Ray Condo and his Ricochets, bringing their hillbilly hootenanny to the Jello Bar on July 10.
- This is how The Boggs refer to their brand of hipster hootenanny, a sort of an art-punk for the early 20th century.
- It feels like a hootenanny, which is probably why Waters went for it after all, giving it the official ‘Yeah, yeah, sure, sure.’
- Music lovers spent less time getting together for hootenannies on the porch or jam sessions around a piano.
- Synths, banjo, trumpet, and anything else found around the studio gets thrown in, creating the feeling of some sort of strange, postmodern hootenanny.
- Publicans have requested late licences, and the biggest hootenanny the locality has seen is expected if Inveraray bring home the ancient trophy.
- I realized that a lot of my songs were singalong quality, and yeah, I can get out there and have a hootenanny vibe.
- First, I placed dozens of garden gnomes on the balcony to deter enemy racoon movements, then spikes were installed on the rooftop to put a end to the animal hootenanny taking place.
- Performing a live version of ‘Don't Think Twice, It's Alright,’ Elliott tells a story about the first time he sang it at a hootenanny in New York, with Dylan in the audience.
- We're only a trio so we can't have a hootenanny, but I'd settle for a shindig.
- In fact, standing on stage at the TLA, they look like Christian church camp counselors organizing a hootenanny in the mess hall.
- A few more pets and their owners were visiting and it turned into a bit of a Norwich Terrier hootenanny, as the photo below will demonstrate (in a static, on-the-lead kind of way; Millie is second from the right).
- Televised sporting event parties are not like the classic, high school drunken rage hootenannies you may be accustomed to.
- We stand amid the swirl of Calgary's G8 welcome party, a $300,000 miniature rodeo and western hootenanny for international delegates, accredited media and local VIPs.
- Each catchphrase and satirical swipe is met with evangelical enthusiasm, and while the hootenanny lasts, the spell of The Simpsons is absolutely transportive.
- The annual Hogmanay hootenanny on Princes Street has shown that we breed men who can wear short-sleeved shirts despite flurries of snow, and girls who can keep on dancing even as their legs turn blue.
Origin1920s (originally US, denoting a gadget or 'thingummy'): of unknown origin. Definition of hootenanny in US English: hootenannynounˈho͞otnˌanēˈhutnˌæni US informal An informal gathering with folk music and sometimes dancing. 〈非正式,主美〉民歌歌会 we invited friends to a hootenanny in our backyard as modifier hootenanny numbers Example sentencesExamples - We're only a trio so we can't have a hootenanny, but I'd settle for a shindig.
- In fact, standing on stage at the TLA, they look like Christian church camp counselors organizing a hootenanny in the mess hall.
- Music lovers spent less time getting together for hootenannies on the porch or jam sessions around a piano.
- A few more pets and their owners were visiting and it turned into a bit of a Norwich Terrier hootenanny, as the photo below will demonstrate (in a static, on-the-lead kind of way; Millie is second from the right).
- Televised sporting event parties are not like the classic, high school drunken rage hootenannies you may be accustomed to.
- This is how The Boggs refer to their brand of hipster hootenanny, a sort of an art-punk for the early 20th century.
- I soon ingratiated myself and we had a hootenanny.
- First, I placed dozens of garden gnomes on the balcony to deter enemy racoon movements, then spikes were installed on the rooftop to put a end to the animal hootenanny taking place.
- And unlike the preceding White Album, the jumbled juxtaposition of forms - faux-blues toss-offs, stately piano ballads, folkie hootenannies - feels less like a band overflowing with inspired ideas than one running out of them.
- The annual Hogmanay hootenanny on Princes Street has shown that we breed men who can wear short-sleeved shirts despite flurries of snow, and girls who can keep on dancing even as their legs turn blue.
- We stand amid the swirl of Calgary's G8 welcome party, a $300,000 miniature rodeo and western hootenanny for international delegates, accredited media and local VIPs.
- While the presence of kazoos in the musical score indicates a perilously high level of zaniness, this hootenanny is worth a visit.
- Also retro and old enough to have been there are Ray Condo and his Ricochets, bringing their hillbilly hootenanny to the Jello Bar on July 10.
- Each catchphrase and satirical swipe is met with evangelical enthusiasm, and while the hootenanny lasts, the spell of The Simpsons is absolutely transportive.
- I realized that a lot of my songs were singalong quality, and yeah, I can get out there and have a hootenanny vibe.
- Synths, banjo, trumpet, and anything else found around the studio gets thrown in, creating the feeling of some sort of strange, postmodern hootenanny.
- It feels like a hootenanny, which is probably why Waters went for it after all, giving it the official ‘Yeah, yeah, sure, sure.’
- Publicans have requested late licences, and the biggest hootenanny the locality has seen is expected if Inveraray bring home the ancient trophy.
- Performing a live version of ‘Don't Think Twice, It's Alright,’ Elliott tells a story about the first time he sang it at a hootenanny in New York, with Dylan in the audience.
- So it's with a leaden heart that I find myself at the King's for my two daughters' annual hootenanny - Aladdin.
Origin1920s (originally US, denoting a gadget or ‘thingummy’): of unknown origin. |