Sailing vs Hooey - What's the difference?
sailing | hooey |
Motion across a body of water in a craft powered by the wind, as a sport or otherwise
Navigation; the skill needed to operate and navigate a vessel
The time of departure from a port
Travelling by ship
(slang) Silly talk or writing; nonsense.
* 2006 , Ronald H. Hoffman (with Sidney Stevens), How to Talk with Your Doctor: The Guide for Patients and Their Physicians Who Want to Reconcile and Use the Best of Conventional and Alternative Medicine , ReadHowYouWant.com (2008),
* 2010 , Kate Sheppard, "
* 2011 October 13, Chuck Lorre, Eric Kaplan & Maria Ferrari, "The Russian Rocket Reaction", episode 5-5 of , 00:16:47–00:17:00:
*:Sheldon Cooper: I did, but I think I've kind of outgrown Star Trek . You know, stock characters, ludicrous plots, beam me up. What a load of hooey .
As nouns the difference between sailing and hooey
is that sailing is motion across a body of water in a craft powered by the wind, as a sport or otherwise while hooey is (slang) silly talk or writing; nonsense.As an adjective sailing
is travelling by ship.As a verb sailing
is .sailing
English
Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* clear sailing * plain sailing * sailing ship * sailing dinghy * sailing vesselAdjective
(-)Verb
(head)Anagrams
*hooey
English
Alternative forms
* hooieNoun
(-)- I heard his speech. It sounded like a whole lot of hooey to me.
pages 216–217:
- For many doctors, meditation resides in the realm of New Age hooey —okay for Indian yogis and students of Eastern religion, but not suitable for scientific study.
Outgoing GOPer Slams Climate Denying Colleagues", Mother Jones , 18 November 2010:
- Unburdened by the prospect of another campaign, Inglis, in this final hearing, spared no scorn for climate change deniers in his own party and beyond, suggesting that they continue to ignore global warming at their own peril. "I would also suggest to my free enterprise colleagues—especially conservatives here—whether you think it’s all a bunch of hooey , what we've talked about in this committee, the Chinese don’t," the South Carolina Republican said in his opening remarks. "And they plan on eating our lunch in this next century."
