hoodoo
English
Etymology
Apparently an alteration of voodoo.
![](../I/m/%C4%90avolja_Varo%C5%A1.jpg)
Some hoodoos (spires of rock).
![](../I/m/Tent_rocks_between_Cavusin_and_Avanos.jpg)
A hoodoo, showing why it is also called a tent rock.
Noun
hoodoo (countable and uncountable, plural hoodoos)
- (chiefly US) A practitioner of voodoo.
- (chiefly US) Supernatural bad luck, or something or someone believed to bring bad luck.
- (geology) A tall thin spire of rock that protrudes from the bottom of arid basins and badlands.
- 2013, Philipp Meyer, The Son, Simon & Schuster 2014, p. 71:
- It was even larger than the mirage made it look—a dozen miles across and a thousand feet deep, with fins and towers and hoodoos like observation posts, mesas and minor buttes, springs flowing brightly in the red rock.
- 2013, Philipp Meyer, The Son, Simon & Schuster 2014, p. 71:
Synonyms
- (spire of rock): tent rock, fairy chimney, earth pyramid
Translations
Verb
hoodoo (third-person singular simple present hoodoos, present participle hoodooing, simple past and past participle hoodooed)
- (transitive) To jinx; to bring bad luck or misfortune to.
References
- “hoodoo”, Bill Casselman
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative
Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.