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HOOKA TOOKA

  • Hooka Tooka
  • 1963 single by Chubby Checker

    "Hooka Tooka" is a song written by Chubby Checker and Elliot Mazer and performed by Chubby Checker. In 1963, the track reached No. 17 on the Billboard

    Hooka Tooka

    Hooka_Tooka

  • Chubby Checker
  • American singer (born 1941)

    37 25 Non-album tracks "Loddy Lo" / 12 4 5 — 17 Chubby's Folk Album "Hooka Tooka" 17 — 13 — 1964 "Hey, Bobba Needle" b/w "Spread Joy" (Non-album track)

    Chubby Checker

    Chubby Checker

    Chubby_Checker

  • The Chambers Brothers
  • American psychedelic soul band

    tracks selected by the reviewer were "People Get Ready", "Call Me" and "Hooka Tooka". According to George Chambers, the group was too busy playing different

    The Chambers Brothers

    The Chambers Brothers

    The_Chambers_Brothers

  • Joe Chambers (singer)
  • American musician (1942–2024)

    Place SFW CD 40204 c 2012 Smithsonian Folkways Recordings - Page 26 15. Hooka Tooka .Richieunterberger.com - LINER NOTES FOR THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS' PEOPLE

    Joe Chambers (singer)

    Joe_Chambers_(singer)

  • Elliot Mazer
  • American audio engineer (1941–2021)

    Horn Cameo 1963 Clark Terry Tread Ye Lightly Cameo 1963 Chubby Checker Hooka Tooka/Loddy Lo Cameo 1963 Chubby Checker With Sy Oliver Cameo 1963 The Tymes

    Elliot Mazer

    Elliot_Mazer

  • Loddy Lo
  • 1963 single by Chubby Checker

    Single by Chubby Checker from the album Chubby's Folk Album B-side "Hooka Tooka" Released October 1963 Genre Rock and roll Length 2:07 Label Parkway

    Loddy Lo

    Loddy_Lo

  • 1963 in music
  • (A Letter from Camp)" – Allan Sherman "He's So Fine" – The Chiffons "Hooka Tooka" - Chubby Checker "Hopeless" – Andy Williams "Hotel Happiness" – Brook

    1963 in music

    1963 in music

    1963_in_music

  • Tim Hardin 1
  • 1966 studio album by Tim Hardin

    ISBN 978-0857125958. Joop (September 7, 2015). "Ackabacka / Icka backa / Hooka Tooka / Green Green Rocky Road (1961)". Joop's Musical Flowers. Retrieved August

    Tim Hardin 1

    Tim_Hardin_1

  • Ed Michel
  • Musical artist

    in the 23 April 1966 issue of Cash Box with the songs "Call Me" and "Hooka Tooka" being singled out. In late 1966, he was working for the Muntz company

    Ed Michel

    Ed_Michel

  • People Get Ready (The Chambers Brothers album)
  • 1966 live album by the Chambers Brothers

    songs singled out for mention were "People Get Ready", "Call Me" and "Hooka Tooka". The reviewer also said that it should delight and excite the listener

    People Get Ready (The Chambers Brothers album)

    People_Get_Ready_(The_Chambers_Brothers_album)

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HOOKA TOOKA

  • Howick
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Howick

    English : habitational name from places in Lancashire and Northumberland. The former is named from Old English hōh ‘spur of a hill’ or hōc ‘hook’ + wīc ‘outlying farm’; the latter probably originally had as its first element Old English hēah ‘high’, but was later influenced by hōh.

    Howick

  • Grapes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (East Anglia)

    Grapes

    English (East Anglia) : perhaps a habitational name from a house bearing the sign of a bunch of grapes. The vocabulary word is attested from the 13th century (at first in the compound wingrape), and comes from Old French grape, which is probably related to a Germanic element meaning ‘hook’.

    Grapes

  • Huxford
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Huxford

    English : habitational name from a place in Devon called Huxford (preserved in the name of Huxford Farm), from the Old English personal name Hōcc or the Old English word hōc ‘hook or angle of land’ + ford ‘ford’.

    Huxford

  • Hooks
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hooks

    English : variant of Hook, either in the topographic sense or a patronymic from the nickname. This surname is also established in northern Ireland.

    Hooks

  • Hooda
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Australian, Muslim

    Hooda

    Right Guidance; Another Name for Quran; Variant of Huda

    Hooda

  • Hook
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (southern)

    Hook

    English (southern) : from Middle English hoke, Old English hōc ‘hook’, in any of a variety of senses: as a metonymic occupational name for someone who made and sold hooks as agricultural implements or employed them in his work; as a topographic name for someone who lived by a ‘hook’ of land, i.e. the bend of a river or the spur of a hill; or as a nickname (in part a survival of an Old English byname) for someone with a hunched back or a hooked nose. A similar ambiguity of interpretation presents itself in the case of Crook. In some cases the surname may be habitational from any of various places named Hook(e), from this word, as for example in Devon, Dorset, Hampshire, Surrey, Wiltshire, and Worcestershire.Swedish (Hö(ö)k) : nickname or a metonymic occupational name from hök ‘hawk’, a soldier’s name.

    Hook

  • WAQUINI
  • Male

    Native American

    WAQUINI

    Native American Cheyenne name WAQUINI means "hook nose."

    WAQUINI

  • Huxtable
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Devon)

    Huxtable

    English (mainly Devon) : habitational name from a farm in North Devon on a spur of Exmoor, named with the Old English personal name Hōc or Old English hōc ‘hook or spur of land’ + stapol ‘post’.

    Huxtable

  • Hacking
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Lancashire)

    Hacking

    English (Lancashire) : habitational name from Hacking in Lancashire, the name of which is of uncertain origin. Early forms appear with the definite article, and the name may represent an Old English term for a fish weir, a derivative of hæcc ‘hatch’, ‘low gate’, or haca ‘hook’.

    Hacking

  • Crook
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Crook

    English : from the Old Norse byname Krókr meaning ‘crook’, ‘bend’, originally possibly bestowed on a cripple or hunchback or a devious schemer, but in early medieval England used as a personal name.English : from Old Norse krókr ‘hook’, ‘bend’, borrowed into Middle English as a vocabulary word and applied as a metonymic occupational name for a maker, seller, or user of hooks or a topographic name for someone who lived by a bend in a river or road. In some instances the surname may have arisen as a habitational name from places in Cumbria and Durham named Crook from this word.

    Crook

  • Crockett
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish (Galloway)

    Crockett

    English and Scottish (Galloway) : nickname for someone who affected a particular hairstyle, from Middle English croket ‘large curl’ (Old Norman French croquet, a diminutive of croque ‘curl’, ‘hook’).Scottish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Riocaird ‘son of Richard’ (see Richard).

    Crockett

  • Hooke
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hooke

    English : variant spelling of Hook.

    Hooke

  • Hake
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hake

    English : from the Old Norse byname Haki (cognate with Hook), given originally to someone with a hunched figure or a hooked nose.North German : variant of Haack.Dutch and North German : from the Germanic personal name Hac(c)o, a short form of a compound name beginning with the element hag ‘hedge’, ‘enclosure’.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Hacke.

    Hake

  • Hagwood
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hagwood

    English : possibly a variant of Hackwood, a habitational name from a minor place so named. One example, in Northamptonshire, is named from Middle English hacked ‘cut’ + wode ‘wood’; another, in Basingstoke, Hampshire is named from Old English haca ‘hook’, ‘bend’ + wudu ‘wood’. In the U.S. this name is frequent in NC.See Hagewood 1.

    Hagwood

  • Happe
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Happe

    English : from Middle English hap(pe) ‘chance’, ‘luck’, ‘fortune’ (from Old Norse happ), applied as a nickname for someone considered fortunate or well favored. Compare Chance, Fortune.German, Dutch, and northern French (Picardy) : from Middle Low German, Middle Dutch, Old French happe ‘hook’, ‘hatchet’, ‘pruning hook’, a metonymic occupational name for a maker of such implements or for someone who used one in his work. Compare Heppe.German : from a reduced form of the medieval German personal names Hadebald or Hadebert (see Happel).

    Happe

  • Treadwell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly West Midlands)

    Treadwell

    English (chiefly West Midlands) : metonymic occupational name for a fuller, from Middle English tred(en) ‘to tread’ + well ‘well’. Fulling was the process by which newly woven cloth was cleaned and shrunk by the use of heat, water, and pressure (from treading) before finally being stretched and laid out to dry on tenter hooks.

    Treadwell

  • Waquini
  • Boy/Male

    Native American

    Waquini

    Hook nose.

    Waquini

  • Faipa
  • Boy/Male

    Polynesian

    Faipa

    Baits the hook.

    Faipa

  • Gaff
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Gaff

    English : metonymic occupational name for someone who made or used iron hooks or crooks, Old French, Middle English gaffe.German : from a derivative of the stem geb- (see Gaffke).

    Gaff

  • Crooker
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Crooker

    English : from a noun derivative of Old Norse krókr ‘hook’, ‘bend’, applied as an occupational name or a topographic or habitational name (see Crook 2).

    Crooker

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Online names & meanings

  • Sebin
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Malayalam

    Sebin

    Short Form of Sebastin - a Saint

  • Hetaa
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Hetaa

    Female Version of Het

  • AULAY
  • Male

    English

    AULAY

    Anglicized form of Scottish Gaelic Amhlaibh, AULAY means "heir of the ancestors."

  • Ahuzam
  • Boy/Male

    Biblical

    Ahuzam

    Their taking or possessing vision.

  • Rance
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Rance

    English : patronymic from the personal name Rand(e) (see Rand 1).

  • Shazari
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Shazari

    Love

  • Sukhpal
  • Boy/Male

    Sikh

    Sukhpal

    Protector of peace

  • Susatya
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit

    Susatya

    Always Truthful

  • Darel
  • Boy/Male

    African, American, Anglo, Australian, British, English, Jamaican

    Darel

    Darling; Beloved; Open

  • Gorav | கோரவ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Gorav | கோரவ

    Lord Shiva

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Other words and meanings similar to

HOOKA TOOKA

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HOOKA TOOKA

  • Hooked
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Hook

  • Hooked
  • a.

    Provided with a hook or hooks.

  • Hamulate
  • a.

    Furnished with a small hook; hook-shaped.

  • Twibil
  • n.

    A reaping hook.

  • Hooking
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Hook

  • Hooklet
  • n.

    A little hook.

  • Hamiform
  • n.

    Hook-shaped.

  • Hook
  • v. i.

    To bend; to curve as a hook.

  • Hook
  • v. t.

    To catch or fasten with a hook or hooks; to seize, capture, or hold, as with a hook, esp. with a disguised or baited hook; hence, to secure by allurement or artifice; to entrap; to catch; as, to hook a dress; to hook a trout.

  • Hook
  • n.

    See Eccentric, and V-hook.

  • Adhamant
  • a.

    Clinging, as by hooks.

  • Hook
  • n.

    The projecting points of the thigh bones of cattle; -- called also hook bones.

  • Ancistroid
  • a.

    Hook-shaped.

  • Eye
  • n.

    A small loop to receive a hook; as hooks and eyes on a dress.

  • Hook
  • n.

    A piece of metal, or other hard material, formed or bent into a curve or at an angle, for catching, holding, or sustaining anything; as, a hook for catching fish; a hook for fastening a gate; a boat hook, etc.

  • Hooky
  • a.

    Full of hooks; pertaining to hooks.

  • Nuthook
  • n.

    A thief who steals by means of a hook; also, a bailiff who hooks or seizes malefactors.