Skip to content
0
  • Definitions
    • Browse A–Z
    • Recently Added
    • Most Popular
    • Most Viewed
    • Word Lists
    • All Categories
  • Learn & Play
    • Hangman Game
    • Grammar Check
    • Common English Words
    • Words Containing "Black"
    • English Practice Chat
  • Articles
    • Evolution of Dictionaries
    • Business Jargon Decoded
    • Build Your Vocabulary
    • Word Etymology Guide
    • Commonly Confused Words
    • Medical Terminology
    • Legal Terminology
    • Business Communication
  • Definitions
    • Browse A–Z
    • Recently Added
    • Most Popular
    • Most Viewed
    • Word Lists
    • All Categories
  • Learn & Play
    • Hangman Game
    • Grammar Check
    • Common English Words
    • Words Containing "Black"
    • English Practice Chat
  • Articles
    • Evolution of Dictionaries
    • Business Jargon Decoded
    • Build Your Vocabulary
    • Word Etymology Guide
    • Commonly Confused Words
    • Medical Terminology
    • Legal Terminology
    • Business Communication
Collapse
Define Dictionary Meaning - True Words & Their Meanings
  1. Define Dictionary Meaning
  2. Categories
  3. Definitions
  4. Playing hooky

Playing hooky

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Definitions
1 Posts 1 Posters 405 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • Sarahundefined Offline
    Sarahundefined Offline
    Sarah
    wrote on last edited by admin
    #1

    Skipping school or work.
    Play hooky, be absent from school without an excuse, is an Americanism first recorded around 1848. Bartletts Dictionary of Americanisms gives this slightly later example: He moped to school gloomy and sad, and took his flogging, along with Joe Harper, for playing hookey the day before. (Mark Twain, Tom Sawyer) And heres another example showing the extended use of the term: I played hookey from the Appropriations Committee this morning. (Harry Truman, Dear Bess)
    Play hooky is probably derived from the Dutch term hoekje (spelen) hide-and-seek. The Dutch word hoek means corner-- the boys in 17th-century New Amsterdam played this game around the corners of the street. Hide-and-seek was a different game back then--the players had to search for a hidden object. Although play hooky originally referred to the game of hide-and-seek, it also had other meanings in the 17th and 18th centuries. It wasnt until the 19th century that schoolchildren began using play hooky to mean skip school.
    Its also been suggested that play hooky comes from the verb hook, euphemistically meaning to steal, or from the phrase hook it, meaning to escape, run away, make off. These derivations are unlikely-- the Random House Dictionary of American Slang points out that the term hook it was not used in the United States until after 1848.
    Play hooky was originally slang, but now, of course, its standard English. But youre right in noting that the term isnt used very much anymore.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes


    Look Up a Word

    Browse A–Z

    ABC DEF GHI JKL MNO PQR STU VWX YZ

    Popular Definitions

    1 Turban 2 Tripple 3 Blessing 4 Bonnet 5 Serendipity 6 Wanderlust 7 Nostalgia 8 Integrity
    View all popular

    Know a better definition?

    Share your knowledge with the community

    Add a Definition

    Explore More Definitions

    Browse our collection of 300,000+ community-written definitions

    Browse A–Z Most Popular Recently Added
    Define Dictionary Meaning
    Most Popular Words All Definitions Terms of Service Privacy Policy Browse Lists

    © 2026 Define Dictionary Meaning. All rights reserved

    • Login

    • Don't have an account? Register

    • Login or register to search.
    • First post
      Last post