| 单词 | cooee | 
| 释义 | cooeen.int.  The call or cry  ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > 			[noun]		 > call > specific call oyezc1440 cooee1790 ahoy1815 yo-ho1823 woo-hoo1880 1790    Vocab. in  Gov. Hunter Jrnl. 408  				Cow-ee to come. 1827    P. Cunningham Two Years New S. Wales 		(ed. 2)	 II. i. 23  				In calling to each other at a distance, [the natives] make use of the word Coo-ee, as we do the word Hollo, prolonging the sound of the coo, and closing that of the ee with a shrill jerk..[It has] become of general use throughout the colony; and a new comer, in desiring an individual to call another back, soon learns to say ‘Coo-ee to him,’ instead of ‘Hollo to him.’ 1852    J. West Hist. Tasmania II. 91  				Some gentlemen, on a visit to a London theatre, to draw the attention of their friends in an opposite box, called out cooey. 1859    K. Cornwallis Panorama New World I. 315  				The ringing koo-eh of the aborigine. 1864    J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. 		(new ed.)	 107  				Cooey, the Australian bush-call, now not unfrequently heard in the streets of London. 1871    Athenæum 27 May 651  				In a narrow and rocky gorge..Mr. Cooper gave the Australian cry of ‘coohee,’ which was answered by a thousand echoes. 1889    Pall Mall Gaz. 3 Jan. 1/3  				Two well-known and wealthy Australian squatters on a visit to the mother country lost themselves in a London fog, and were only reunited after a series of shrill and vigorous ‘coo-e's’. 1896    H. G. Wells Island of Dr Moreau xvii. 161  				Once I was arrested by the distant voice of Montgomery bawling, ‘Coo-ee..Mor-eau!’ 1957    Times 14 Nov. 17/2  				Confident ‘coo-ees’ from both sides of the ground greeted this try [by the Australian rugby team]. Phrases  Australian and New Zealand colloquial.  within (a) cooee (of): within hailing distance; within easy reach, near (to). ΚΠ 1887    G. L. Apperson in  All Year Round 30 July 67/1  				A common mode of expression is to be ‘within cooey’ of a place..Now to be ‘within cooey’ of Sydney is to be at the distance of an easy journey therefrom. 1893    Herald 		(Melbourne)	 26 June 2/6  				Witness said that there was a post-office clock ‘within coo-ee’, or within less than half-a-mile of the station. 1896    H. Lawson In Days when World was Wide 		(1900)	 80  				Weary teamsters struggled on while it was light, Just to camp within a cooey of the Shanty for the night. 1899    ‘S. Rudd’ On our Selection 28  				There wasn't a horse in the district could come within cooee of her. 1916    ‘Anzac’ On Anzac Trail 39  				The niggers..wouldn't come within coo-ee of our mob when engaged in bomb-throwing. 1933    Bulletin 		(Sydney)	 16 Aug. 10/2  				In George-Street, within coo-ee of the Town Hall. 1946    F. D. Davison Dusty xv. 164  				Tom, within a cooee of seventy, had made a new start in life. 1965    Weekly News 		(Auckland)	 4 Aug. 14/4  				But nothing that Roux has achieved on this tour came within coo-ee of the effort of Gainsford. Derivatives  ˈcooee  v. 		(also cooey)	 (intransitive) to utter this call. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > cry or shout			[verb (intransitive)]		 > call > to attract attention > specific ho1377 to squeak beef1699 hallo1781 oy1816 cooee1827 hoy1836 yoohoo1948 1827 [see main sense].							 1859    All Year Round 21 May 80  				When I cooeyed, like a ‘black fellow’, from Queen Anne's tower. 1888    J. McCarthy  & R. C. Praed Ladies' Gallery I. i. 10  				A black fellow would not coo-ēe in that way. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < | 
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