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hokey-pokey
[hoh-kee-poh-kee]
noun
hocus-pocus; trickery.
Often Hokey-Pokey a dance performed in a circle, or a song describing the simple movements of the dance.
ice cream as formerly sold by street vendors.
New Zealand.a toffee-flavored candy or ice cream popular in New Zealand.
Hokey-Pokey. a brand of white chocolate ice cream with honeycomb and caramel.
hokey-pokey
/ ˌəʊɪˈəʊɪ /
noun
another word for hocus-pocus hocus-pocus
a brittle toffee sold in lumps
Word History and Origins
Origin of hokey-pokey1
Example Sentences
After a couple rounds of the hokey-pokey in their dance space, I knew I just had the best date ever.
In the United Kingdom—where its long, strange history begins—the hokey-pokey is known as the hokey-kokey.
“Now I want you to put your left foot forward, then pull it back. Put your right foot forward, pull it back. Don’t go anywhere, just do a little hokey-pokey for me.”
Whether the lyrical theme is love, rage, jealousy, sorrow, humility, a damaged political system or how to do the hokey-pokey, lyrics arrive bundled with melody and rhythm, and the result is a sublime and potent mnemonic device.
Unschooled, synapse-challenged, her audience nevertheless could tell the difference; they knew the distinction “between Beethoven and the Hokey-Pokey.”
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