释义 |
▪ I. yaw-haw, v.|ˈjɔːˈhɔː| [Echoic.] intr. To laugh rudely or noisily. Hence yaw-haw n., a loud or rude laugh; yaw-hawing ppl. a.
1836Haliburton Clockm. Ser. i. xix, I had to pucker up my mouth..to keep from yawhawin in her face. 1912H. Macfall in English Rev. Jan. 334 A booth at a fair, a place set up but to tickle the country-bumpkins into yaw-haws. ▪ II. yaw-haw Intended to represent an affected pronunciation characterized by loose articulation in which open vowel sounds predominate. Hence attrib., as n. (= affected person) and v. (cf. yaw int. and v., yaw-yaw v.).
1867E. B. Ramsay Art of Reading 9 All reading where sounding the vowels predominates is indistinct. At Cambridge, in my time, it used to be called a ‘yaw-haw’ reading. 1876J. Grant One of the ‘600’ vii, That yaw-hawing donkey, Berkeley. |