hokey-pokey [hoh-kee-poh-kee] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for hokey-pokey on Thesaurus.com noun
- hocus-pocus; trickery.
- Often Hokey-Pokey. a dance performed in a circle, or a song describing the simple movements of the dance.
- ice cream as formerly sold by street vendors.
- New Zealand. a toffee-flavored candy or ice cream popular in New Zealand.
Trademark.
- Hokey-Pokey. a brand of white chocolate ice cream with honeycomb and caramel.
Origin of hokey-pokey First recorded in 1840–50; variant of hocus-pocus Related Words for hokey-pokey absurdity, disobedience, foolishness, hanky-panky, horseplay, inanity, insanity, lunacy, misbehavior, mischief, monkeyshine, nonsense, poppycock, prank, silliness, stupidity, craziness, tommyrot, absurdness, antics Examples from the Web for hokey-pokey Historical Examples of hokey-pokey
Hot gauffrette and hokey-pokey venders are always near at hand.
Helen Davenport Gibbons
Here is the poorer Italian colony; organ-grinders, ice-cream-barrow-men, “hokey-pokey” sellers, and their like.
Mrs. E. T. Cook.
They both laughed, feeling like mischievous children who had played a successful trick on the hokey-pokey man.
Charles Klein
I didn’t notice anything except a hokey-pokey seller, adding his mite to the infant mortality of the district.
Samuel Hopkins Adams
British Dictionary definitions for hokey-pokey hokey-pokey noun
- another word for hocus-pocus (def. 1), hocus-pocus (def. 2)
- NZ a brittle toffee sold in lumps
Word Origin and History for hokey-pokey
1847, “false cheap material,” perhaps an alteration of hocus-pocus, or from the nonsense chorus and title of a comic song (Hokey Pokey Whankey Fong) that was popular c.1830. Applied especially to cheap ice cream sold by street vendors (1884), in Philadelphia, and perhaps other places, it meant shaved ice with artificial flavoring. The words also were the title of a Weber-Fields musical revue from 1912. The modern dance song of that name hit the U.S. in 1950 (“Life” described it Nov. 27, 1950, as “a tuneless stomp that is now sweeping the U.C.L.A. campus”), but it is said to have originated in Britain in World War II, perhaps from a Canadian source.