释义 |
ˈhurrish, huˈr(r)oosh, v.|ˈhʌrɪʃ, hʌˈruːʃ| Also hooroosh. trans. To drive with the cry ‘hurrish!’ or ‘hurroosh!’ Also absol.
1839J. D. Hooker Jrnl. in L. Huxley Life (1918) I. iv. 91 He used..to start up, take his stick, shout, hooroosh..and scare the poor little snips out of their senses. 1864Mrs. H. Wood Trevlyn Hold II. xviii. 264 When he was put to hurrish the crows away from the land. 1884Upton Gloss. (E. D. S.), Hurrish, to drive cattle. 1895J. Barlow Strangers at Lisconnel 41 You might as well try to huroosh one chicken off a rafter and not scare the couple that were huddled beside it. So huˈrroosh n.
1836Knickerbocker VIII. 208 When they were all free, they began to sky-lark and kick up a hooroosh in all quarters. 1851H. Melville Moby Dick III. xxxiv. 208 What a hooroosh aloft there! 1888R. Kipling Plain Tales from Hills (1891) 31 There was a wild hurroosh at the Club. 1959News Chron. 21 Oct. 6/5 Sex hormones..went off with a great hooroosh. Both breeders and butchers are now..having second thoughts. |