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hooch

[ UK /hˈuːt‍ʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈhutʃ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an illicitly distilled (and usually inferior) alcoholic liquor

How To Use hooch In A Sentence

  • So that's how they miscall hooch down in this country," ruminated The Plunderer
  • Harrison even told the story sometimes right in front of Lolla-Wossiky, and the one-eyed drunk just nodded and laughed and grinned and acted like he had no brains at all, no human dignity, just about the lowest, crawliest Red that Hooch ever seen. He Don't Know Him
  • If this dude can even entertain setting up a little hoochie-coochie rendezvous during your engagement, when you're supposed to be gaga over each other, what's he going to do a few years down the line when babies are screaming and there are bills to be paid and you've both let yourself go a little and you just had an horrible fight over whose turn it is to walk the dog? The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • But unless you've got someone to guide you safely back to your welcoming bed, steer clear of the local hooch - ouzo - the Greek spirit flavoured with aniseed consumed diluted with water.
  • Even worse, there was a direct hit on a nearby hooch.
  • The officer unwound his window, opened his mouth, but before he could say anything, Hooch had bounded forward onto the roadway. BEHINDLINGS
  • But it wasn't the night of hoochie-coochie that Coach Eric had hoped for-nope, Tami wanted to whoop it up with some teacher-pals playing Bunco. Entertainment Weekly's PopWatch
  • Therefore, I can gather to me no more possessions, and when ye are athirst for hooch, he will quench ye and without robbery. A HYPERBOREAN BREW
  • The Government was also forced to admit that illicit hooch was being brewed in Aarey colony, a reserve forest area in the city.
  • This week searchers have been trying to find one such errant gator from the Chattahoochee River outside of Atlanta, Georgia. Archive 2007-06-01
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