Sentence examples for as hoochie from inspiring English sources

The phrase "as hoochie" is not standard in written English and may be considered informal or slang.
It can be used in contexts where you are describing someone or something in a playful or derogatory manner, often related to behavior or appearance.
Example: "She danced at the party as hoochie, drawing everyone's attention with her bold moves."
Alternatives: "like a flirt" or "in a provocative way".

Exact(1)

By the following year I was in the band of the great Willie Dixon, who wrote classics such as Hoochie Coochie Man, I Just Want to Make Love to You and Little Red Rooster.

Similar(59)

Don't overdo it with sparkly jewelry or you will come off as a hoochie mama.

But who other than the marvelous choreographer and dancer Trajal Harrell would have thought to reframe it "as a hoochie-koochie show"?

Mr. Combs and George Elizondo were credited with directing the accompanying video, which bombarded the audience with images from Mississippi civil rights demonstrations, stage shots of the Notorious B.I.G., Jimi Hendrix jamming and what one observer referred to as "the obligatory hoochie mamas grinding in thongs".

The stereotype of black women as sexually deviant and aggressive "Jezebels" finds one contemporary reflection in the "hoochie" image, which is increasingly prominent in black as well as white cultural and media venues (Collins 2000, 81-84).

These two artists also helped establish Chess Records as one of the leading independent labels in the United States with hits such as Muddy Waters's "(I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man" (1954), "Mannish Boy" (1955), and "Got My Mojo Working"(1957) and Howlin' Wolf's "Moanin' at Midnight" (1951), "Evil" (1954), and "Smokestack Lightnin' " (1956).

A fleck of paint on its opening groove creates a slow heartbeat, just before Hoochie Coochie Man kicks in, as if the record is actually alive.

"Hoochie Coochie Man" is characterized as a "self-mythologizing testament" by Janovitz.

Taylor was the revue's lead singer and acted as its narrator; his numbers included "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man", "The Thrill is Gone", "Blues Man" and "Let the Good Times Roll".

As numerous artists recorded it in a variety of styles, "Hoochie Coochie Man" became a blues standard.

In his encore, Willie Dixon's "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man," Mr. Generet abandoned suavity to unleash a raw blues growl as feral as that of Muddy Waters, who popularized this swaggering virile boast.

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