jolly-hockey-sticks
English
Adjective
jolly-hockey-sticks (comparative more jolly-hockey-sticks, superlative most jolly-hockey-sticks)
- (UK) Wholesomely athletic and enthusiastic, in a manner stereotypically associated with traditional British public schools for girls.
- 2003, Caroline Upcher, Falling for Mr. Wrong:
- Polly couldn't abide Pat Walsh's bossy, jolly hockey-sticks manner and her curious predilection for calling absolutely everyone "babe."
- 2005, Jim Christy, The redemption of Anna Dupree, page 122:
- We had to march along behind one of our mistresses — they were all very jolly hockey-sticks. March to church and then a lockstep turn about the park, everyone staring at us, knowing where we were from.
- 2006, Richard E. Grant, The Wah-Wah diaries: the making of a film:
- There was a brigade of horsy women with enormous arses, moustaches and jolly-hockey-sticks ideas about everything walloping about in all directions, whose skins had weathered like leather and whose breath and hands always smelled of horse saliva and dung.
- 2008, Alison Bowyer, Dawn French: The Unauthorized Biography, page 19:
- Boarding-school life was a lot like Mallory Towers or St Clare's, the fictional jolly-hockey-sticks schools created by Enid Blyton. 'We would have midnight feasts, and I suppose it was a bit like the Blyton books,' recalls Susan Lawrence.
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