heinie

noun
/ˈhaɪni/

Etymology

From a corruption of *hindie, for *behindie (“behind, rear end, hindward parts”), equivalent to hind + -ie. Perhaps influenced in some way by Heinie (“a German”).

  1. derived from *ḱem-
  2. inherited from *hindō
  3. inherited from *hindu
  4. inherited from hind
  5. inherited from hind
  6. suffixed as heinie — “hind + ie

Definitions

  1. The buttocks.

    • Hey there, people, I'm Bobby Brown They say I'm the cutest boy in town My car is fast, my teeth is shiny I tell all the girls they can kiss my heinie
    • She had spent enough time kissing heinies to wear her lips right off. And Shelby Symington didn't like kissing heinies. Down in Atlanta, where she was from, people used to line up to kiss hers.
  2. A diminutive form of Heinrich, or its English cognate Henry, sometimes applied to a…

    A diminutive form of Heinrich, or its English cognate Henry, sometimes applied to a person of (real or supposed) German heritage.

    • Heinie^([Heinie Zimmerman]) played with the Cubs from 1907 thru 1916, as a third baseman.
  3. A German, especially a German soldier.

    • "Let's go get them heinies, Sergeant," I challenged, with forced good cheer.
    • The Heinies had run off. We were suspicious; the boys were a little nervous because in a hedgerow we didn't know where our friends and foes were. Suddenly Bud said, “Damn, there's a Heinie over there. There's his helmet!”
    • At the outcry of “Heinies!" Gaul jumped out of the window and bolted for the woods.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for heinie. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA