hooch

listen to the pronunciation of hooch
İngilizce - Türkçe
alkollü içecek
içki
argo içki
{i} alkollü içki
eski
İngilizce - İngilizce
Alcoholic liquor, especially inferior or illicit whisky
A thatched hut, CHU, or any simple dwelling
Hooch is strong alcoholic drink. strong alcohol, especially alcohol that has been made illegally (hoochinoo (19-20 centuries))
A thatched hut, or any simple dwelling
{i} (Slang) alcoholic liquor (especially one that is of low-quality or illegally manufactured); marijuana (Slang)
{i} small thatched hut; dormitory, living quarters; home where a man maintains a prostitute or mistress
an illicitly distilled (and usually inferior) alcoholic liquor
Pieter de Hooch
or Pieter de Hoogh (baptized Dec. 20, 1629, Rotterdam, Neth. died 1684, Amsterdam?) Dutch genre painter. He trained in Haarlem and was a member of the painters' guild of Delft (1655-57). In style and subject matter, his work is similar to that of Johannes Vermeer; he was noted for his small interiors and sunny outdoor scenes, with figures engaged in humble, domestic activities in settings of serene simplicity. In his best works, he was concerned with the effect of enclosures on light intensity, tonal variations, and linear perspective. After he moved to Amsterdam ( 1661), his paintings increased in quantity but declined in quality. He died in a mental institution
hootch
{i} (Slang) alcoholic liquor (especially one that is of low-quality or illegally manufactured)
hootch
Soldiers' living quarters or a native hut in Vietnam
hootch
Place of lodging (billet)
hootch
an illicitly distilled (and usually inferior) alcoholic liquor
hootch
Used generically, a dwelling On a U S base, a hootch was usually a rectangular building made of 2 x 4's and plywood with a corrugated tin roof Also used in reference to Vietnamese civilian houses
hooch

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    huç

    Eş anlamlılar

    moonshine

    Telaffuz

    /ˈho͞oʧ/ /ˈhuːʧ/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'hüch ] (noun.) 1897. Abbreviation of Hoochinoo, a group of Alaskan Indians who made liquor.