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Hooty vs Cooty - What's the difference?

hooty | cooty |

As adjectives the difference between hooty and cooty

is that hooty is characterised by a hooting sound while cooty is (slang) afflicted with body lice or coots.

As a noun cooty is

.

hooty

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Characterised by a hooting sound.
  • * 1988 , Peter Hugh Reed, American record guide: Volume 51
  • Kegel has a distant, underpowered chorus and a dull orchestra. Tempos are too rushed for effect, and the interpretation is downright delicate - totally inappropriate. A hooty , scratchy soprano and a stiff baritone don't help.
  • * {{quote-news, year=2008, date=March 18, author=Natalie Angier, title=In Most Species, Faithfulness Is a Fantasy, work=New York Times citation
  • , passage=Oh, there are plenty of animals in which males and females team up to raise young, as we do, that form “pair bonds” of impressive endurance and apparent mutual affection, spending hours reaffirming their partnership by snuggling together like prairie voles or singing hooty , doo-wop love songs like gibbons, or dancing goofily like blue-footed boobies. }}

    cooty

    English

    Adjective

    (er)
  • (slang) Afflicted with body lice or coots.
  • Noun

    (cooties)