English edit

Etymology edit

Unknown; potentially Scottish. Use is tied to the Appalachian culture in the US.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

hootenanny (plural hootenannies)

  1. (music) An informal, festive performance by folk singers, often including audience participation with the use of acoustic instruments.
    Coordinate term: jam session
    • 2013 August 11, Jody Rosen, “Jody Rosen on the Rise of Bro-Country”, in New York Magazine[1]:
      It bespoke country’s devotion to realism, to songs about Saturday night’s hootenanny and Sunday morning’s moral reckoning, not to mention the kitchen-table truths of Monday through Friday.
  2. (obsolete) A placeholder word for a nonspecific or forgotten thing.
    Synonyms: thingamajig; see also Thesaurus:thingy

Further reading edit