Heinie
[hahy-nee] /ˈhaɪ ni/
noun, Older Slang: Disparaging and Offensive.
1.
a contemptuous term used to refer to a German, especially a German soldier in World War I or II.
[hahy-nee] /ˈhaɪ ni/
noun, Slang.
1.
the .
n.
also Heine, as a typical name of a German man, 1904, North American slang, from pet form of common German masc. proper name Heinrich (see Henry). Brought to Europe in World War I by Canadian soldiers (British soldiers called the adversary Fritz).
n.
slang for “the buttocks,” by 1930s, probably a contraction of hind end.
noun
The buttocks; ass, butt, keister: I think it was her heinie. That high, insolent ass
[1930s+; probably fr hind end]
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[hey-nuh s] /ˈheɪ nəs/ adjective 1. hateful; odious; abominable; totally reprehensible: a heinous offense. /ˈheɪnəs; ˈhiː-/ adjective 1. evil; atrocious adj. late 14c., from Old French hainos “inconvenient, awkward; hateful, unpleasant; odious” (Modern French haineux), from haine “hatred,” from hair “to hate,” from Frankish *hatjan (cf. Old Saxon haton, Old English hatian “to hate;” see […]
- Heinously
[hey-nuh s] /ˈheɪ nəs/ adjective 1. hateful; odious; abominable; totally reprehensible: a heinous offense. /ˈheɪnəs; ˈhiː-/ adjective 1. evil; atrocious adj. late 14c., from Old French hainos “inconvenient, awkward; hateful, unpleasant; odious” (Modern French haineux), from haine “hatred,” from hair “to hate,” from Frankish *hatjan (cf. Old Saxon haton, Old English hatian “to hate;” see […]
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[hahyn-rik; German hahyn-rikh] /ˈhaɪn rɪk; German ˈhaɪn rɪx/ noun 1. a male given name, Germanic form of .
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