sooey


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sooey

(ˈsuːɪ)
interj
(Agriculture) dialect US a call used to summon pigs
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The Chop Sooey Pig Squealer features a laminated wood barrel, flexible enhancer and produces loud squeals and bawls.
Just hours later, pals Declan McCormack, 22, and 20-year-old Owen Kelly, were killed when the car they were in left the road at 11.40pm in Sooey, Co Sligo.
About a year ago, Ron Watson of Little Rock and Brent Shad of Chicago, co-owners of Sooey Foods Group, spent $20 on ingredients and cooked up a batch of Sooey Sauce, an all-purpose seasoning, marinade and table sauce, that they packed into 36 Mason jars and sold at a hair salon in Illinois.
Heather Sooey, 37, of 305 Village Drive, Bourne, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, dismissed upon payment of $100 in court costs; operating a motor vehicle with a suspended registration, dismissed; uninsured, dismissed; unregistered, not responsible; no inspection sticker, responsible; registration sticker missing, not responsible.
It was just me, my wife Terri and our dog Sooey being filmed doing what we do every day."
They paint their faces red and holler, "Woo pig sooey" in the most obnoxious, uncivilized way.
O-words not containing stops and referring to prolonged sounds arf fizz hail heehaw hiss hoarse howl huff low lull mew miaow moan moo neigh ring roar shoo sigh sing sizzle sneeze sniff snore sooey sough swish swoosh vroom wail waul whang wheeze whiff whine whinny whirr whiz whoosh woof woof yawn yell zz 2.4.
Later, a group from Pauline Baptist Church in Monticello, Arkansas--on their way to stand in line for a White House tour--saw him across the street and, naturally, did the "pig sooey" Razorback yell.
Deabanico, Imelda de Castro, Kat del Rosario, Crescencio Martires Doma Jr., Simon Paul Felismino, Jonathan Vergara Geronimo, Levine Lao, Rhodora Lynn Lintag, Crizel Sicat, Pocholo Torres and Sooey Valencia.
ORourke all of Ardvarney, Dromahaire; two brothers, John and his wife Maura Cullen of Geevagh, County Sligo and Terence and his wife Cloddagh Cullen of Sooey, County Sligo; her brother-in-law, Eamonn Cogan and family of Ballindoon, County Sligo and several nieces and nephews.
The couple celebrated their big day in the 14th century Markree Castle Country House Hotel near Collooney, Co Sligo, after tying the knot on Saturday at a nearby church in the village of Sooey.