单词 | hadaway |
释义 | hadawayint. English regional (north-eastern). Expressing a range of emotions and commands, esp. (originally) encouragement or (more commonly in recent use) exasperation; ‘go on’; ‘go away’; ‘you must be joking’, etc. Now often used self-consciously or parodically as representative of a stereotypical Geordie (Newcastle) dialect. ΚΠ 1825 J. T. Brockett Gloss. North Country Words 88 Had away! Had away!, go away; a term of encouragement, I believe, peculiar to the north. c1850 J. P. Robson Songs Bards of Tyne 58 Haud away, Harry! push away, Harry! Harry, thou's king o' the Tyems an' the Tyne! 1887 Monthly Chron. North-Country Lore & Legend Nov. 428/2 ‘Mind,’ said one to the other, ‘aa can pay ye,’ meaning of course that he could thrash him. ‘Had away,’ retorted his companion, ‘ye cannot pay the menage man!’ 1891 Allan's Illustr. Tyneside Songs (rev. ed.) 537 Hadaway, Harry, lad!..Pull, like a good 'un, through storm or through shine. 1969 S. Dobson Larn Yersel Geordie 29 Hadaway an' get a shyeul o' coal oot the cree. 1980 A. Price Hour of Donkey xi. 160 Why man—wee the fukken hell d'ye think ye are? Haddaway and shite! 2000 M. Herman Purely Belter 37 Haddaway, man, we can't turn down a spot of babby-sitting! A fiver's a fiver! 2016 Mirror (Nexis) 3 July Twitter decided I'd ‘poshed up’ on purpose, a slur to which there is only one possible answer: ‘Haddaway man, you must be a reet wazzock if you reckon that.’ This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < int.1825 |
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