aboot - meaning and definition. What is aboot
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What (who) is aboot - definition

1958 SINGLE BY LORD ROCKINGHAM'S XI
Hoots mon; There's a moose loose in this hoose; There's a Moose Loose Aboot This Hoose

aboot      
About. Used to emphasize Canadianess.
You're Canadian? What are you talking aboot, eh?
For Those Aboot to Rock: Live at the Commodore         
LIVE ALBUM BY STRAPPING YOUNG LAD
For Those Aboot To Rock: Live at the Commodore
For Those Aboot To Rock: Live at the Commodore is a live performance DVD by the Canadian Heavy Metal band Strapping Young Lad, released in 2004 by Century Media. A CD version was released along with the 2013 "Metal for the Masses" reissue of City to celebrate Century Media's 25th anniversary.
Hoots Mon         
"Hoots Mon" is a song written by Harry Robinson, and performed by Lord Rockingham's XI. It was a number-one hit single for three weeks in 1958 on the UK Singles Chart.

Wikipedia

Hoots Mon

"Hoots Mon" is a song written by Harry Robinson, and performed by Lord Rockingham's XI. It was a number-one hit single for three weeks in 1958 on the UK Singles Chart. It is based on the old Scottish folk song "A Hundred Pipers". It was also one of the first rock and roll songs to feature the Hammond organ, which would become popular in rock and roll music the following year with Dave "Baby" Cortez's "The Happy Organ".

The record is mostly instrumental, punctuated by four stereotypical Scottish phrases:

  • "Och aye", an exclamation meaning "Oh yes."
  • "Hoots mon", an expression of dismissal or annoyance.
  • "There's a moose loose aboot this hoose" ("There's a mouse loose about this house"), a standard cliché highlighting Scots language pronunciation.
  • "It's a braw, bricht, moonlicht nicht." ("It's a fine, bright moonlit night").

The author and journalist Benny Green played the tenor saxophone on the recording.

The song was revived by Bad Manners and included on their album Stupidity. It was also used in a commercial for Maynards Wine Gums with the line "There's a moose loose aboot this hoose" changed to "There's juice loose aboot this hoose".

Pronunciation examples for aboot
1. I think I've just aboot got it.
Off-Broadway's The Whirligig _ Zosia Mamet + More _ Talks at Google
2. I'd really like to see aboot the new designs."
The Scott Brothers Dream Home _ Talks at Google
Examples of use of aboot
1. But it was his breezy warning to would–be terrorists that "Glasgow doesn‘t accept this... we‘ll set aboot ye" that captured the nation‘s imagination and transformed "Smeato" into a folk hero.
2. We‘ll just set aboot ye." The punch: Live on TV John re–enacts the moment he landed one on the suspect The interviews were subsequently posted on the website YouTube and have been viewed a staggering 200,000 times, making Mr Smeaton, from Erskine, Renfrewshire a global hero.
3. Best example of style÷ Inevitably, Mr Reid‘s "Who‘re yoo messin‘ aboot wi‘, laddie?‘‘ style led to a memorable clash with Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight last year÷ Reid÷ "You called me an attack dog because I‘ve got a Glasgow accent." Paxman÷ "It is nothing to do with having a Glasgow accent.
4. And surely you‘ll be your pint stowp And surely I‘ll be mine, And we‘ll drink a richt guid willy waught For auld lang syne. [chorus] We twa hae run aboot the braes And pu‘d the gowans fine, But we‘ve wandered monie a wearie fit‘ Since auld lang syne. [chorus] We twa hae paidled in the burn Frae morning sun till dine But seas a‘tween us braid hae roared Since auld lang syne [chorus] And here‘s a hand my trusty fere And gie‘s a hand o‘ thine And we‘ll tak‘ a cup o‘ kindness yet For auld lang syne. [chorus] Words: Robert Burns Reader comments (0) No comments have so far been submitted.