oojah
English
Etymology
Unknown. Perhaps formed in English from a similar term; compare whosit, whaddayacallit. Perhaps coined as an exotic-sounding nonsense word. Perhaps from Persian or Urdu حجت (hujjat, “argument”), from Arabic حجة (ḥujja, “argument; pretext”).[1] Attested from the early 20th century.
Noun
oojah (plural oojahs)
- (slang) Something whose name is unknown or unimportant; a thingy; a whatsit.
- 1951, Terence Rattigan, “Who is Sylvia?”, in The collected plays of Terence Rattigan, published 1953, page 211:
- DAPHNE. I say, old bean, where’s the oojah?
MARK. The oojah?
DAPHNE: The om-tiddly-om-pom.
- 1951, Maura Laverty, “Liffey Lane”, in Cathy Leeney, Deirdre McFeely, editors, The Plays of Maura Laverty, published 2023, page 90:
- CUT-THE-RASHER: Aye, indeed – Mary Doyle’s missing her bit of comfort.
MRS DOYLE: G’long you dirty-minded ould hoojah. That’s one thing anyway: we won’t have to be putting up with you once we leave the lane.
- 1971, Brian Aldiss, A Soldier Erect, page 94:
- I’ve seen blokes in hot countries go clean round the oojar because of the perverted practices of native women.
Derived terms
References
- “oojah, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, March 2022.
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