Ooer vs Cooer - What's the difference?
ooer | cooer |
(UK) said to acknowledge a double entendre or something that sounds rude
One who coos.
* 1863 , Henry Gardiner Adams, Our feathered families (page 334)
As an interjection ooer
is said to acknowledge a double entendre or something that sounds rude.As a noun cooer is
one who coos.ooer
English
Alternative forms
* oo-erInterjection
(en interjection)Derived terms
* ooer missus, oo-er missusAnagrams
*cooer
English
Noun
(en noun)- The best Pigeon House, of course, is one made expressly for the purpose — about square, with a shelving roof. Here the compartments can be made sufficiently wide and high; say a foot and a half, or even two feet each way. The latter is a comfortable chamber for the pair of cooers .