hee-haw n.1
1. a donkey.
DSUE (1984) 545: mid-C.19–20. |
2. (US, also hee-ho) loud, offensive laughter, esp. if scornful.
Sporting Times 12 Jan. 5/4: The hee-haw, or the guffaw [...] may suit some people, but for brightening the world [...] give us the giggling girls. | ||
More Fables in Sl. (1960) 180: They paid no Attention except to give him the Rowdy Hee-Ho when they saw him. | ||
Pitchin’ Man 51: [T]he folk there began givin’ Bismarck the hee-haw. | ||
Dear ‘Herm’ 147: Which gives me a hee-haw on account he never wore a pair of boots in his life. |
3. derision, nonsense.
(con. 1830s–60s) All That Swagger 322: I met a man out in the Never Never – fellow with a university education – talked real hee-haw like the old parson. | ||
Detective Story Apr. 🌐 The great detective always winds up behind the big hee-haw. | ‘Movie Stuff’ in||
Nil Carborundum (1963) Act II: You’re the one that’s been giving off all the heehaw about the system. |
4. in pl. the testicles.
Decent Ride 10: A hairy ersehole wi a pair ay hee-haws dangling under it [...] just disnae dae it fir the Juice felly here. |