whoopee-do
See also: whoopee do
English
editInterjection
editwhoopee-do
- Alternative spelling of whoop-de-doo
- 2012, Jonathan Logan Donovan, Husk: A Tale of Human Hunger, →ISBN, page 161:
- Whoopee-do, man. Congrats! That basically just described an Iguana.
Noun
editwhoopee-do (plural whoopee-dos)
- Alternative spelling of whoop-de-doo
- Commotion
- 1991, Sue Grafton -, G is for Gumshoe, →ISBN:
- “Yeah, but what's the big whoopee-do about that?”
- Event marked by excitement
- 2013, John Nichols, The Nirvana Blues: A Novel, →ISBN, page 10:
- Warming up with a Streak for God, they hit every Sunday service possible, from Bob Condum's evangelical whoopee-do (nailed by a girl with beautiful waist-length strawberry hair who galloped through the noxious tent just as two dozen of Bob's peroxide blond minrobed Saviourettes were garnisheeing the weekly paychecks of a hundred destitute Pueblo natives), to the Episcopal church, where Father Dagwood Whipple was so flustered by the bearded grasshopper thundering through his service rattling a tambourine that he tripped on his robe, tumbled against the lectern, opening a thirteen-stitch forehead gash, and dropped his twelve-pound Bible into the front pew, squarely atop a wealthy parish benefactor's purple noggin.
- Commotion
Adjective
editwhoopee-do (comparative more whoopee-do, superlative most whoopee-do)
- Alternative spelling of whoop-de-doo