Pooh

//puː// intj, name, noun, verb

Definitions

Intj
  1. 1
    Expressing dismissal, contempt, impatience, etc.

    "I am carelesse what the fustie World speakes of me, puh."

  2. 2
    Expressing disgust at an unpleasant smell.

    "Pooh!... How you smell of tobacco."

  3. 3
    Alternative form of poo: a minced oath for 'shit'. alt-of, alternative, euphemistic

    "Mom offers everybody fudge and says ‘Oh, pooh!’ when she gets upset."

Proper Noun
  1. 1
    Ellipsis of Winnie the Pooh. abbreviation, alt-of, ellipsis
Noun
  1. 1
    An instance of saying "pooh". countable

    "She […] hath ſtiled him with an immortall penne, the bawewawe of ſchollars, the tutt of gentlemen, the tee-heegh of gentlewomen, the phy of citizens, the blurt of Courtiers, the poogh of good letters, the faph of good manners, and the whoop-hooe of good boyes in London ſtreetes."

  2. 2
    Alternative form of poo: feces. alt-of, alternative, childish, uncountable

    "‘You're rather in the pooh with the Adelaide police.’ ‘How much do I stink with them?’"

  3. 3
    Alternative form of poo: A piece of feces; an act of defecation. UK, alt-of, alternative, childish, countable
Verb
  1. 1
    To say "pooh". intransitive

    "The wrimouth'd Crittick... That mewes, and puh's and shakes his brainelesse head..."

  2. 2
    To say "pooh" to. transitive

    "‘Pooh! pooh!’ re-echoed his mother, ‘don't pooh me, John.’"

  3. 3
    Alternative form of poo: To defecate or dirty something with feces. alt-of, alternative, childish, intransitive

    "My cat poohed in here."

Etymology

Etymology 1

Originally onomatopoeic ("perhaps ancient" according to Online Etymology Dictionary) for a puff of air, after earlier poh and similar to later pew, phew, pho, phoo, poof. Later influenced by poop, onomatopoeic for the sound of flatulating and defecating, and by interjections of disgust similar to phew, pee-ew. Interjection for an unpleasant smell possibly linked to French puer (“to stink”).

Etymology 2

Originally onomatopoeic ("perhaps ancient" according to Online Etymology Dictionary) for a puff of air, after earlier poh and similar to later pew, phew, pho, phoo, poof. Later influenced by poop, onomatopoeic for the sound of flatulating and defecating, and by interjections of disgust similar to phew, pee-ew. Interjection for an unpleasant smell possibly linked to French puer (“to stink”).

Etymology 3

Originally onomatopoeic ("perhaps ancient" according to Online Etymology Dictionary) for a puff of air, after earlier poh and similar to later pew, phew, pho, phoo, poof. Later influenced by poop, onomatopoeic for the sound of flatulating and defecating, and by interjections of disgust similar to phew, pee-ew. Interjection for an unpleasant smell possibly linked to French puer (“to stink”).

Next best steps

Mini challenge

Unscramble this word: pooh