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Mott the Hoople

English rock band of the early 70s. Lineup: Ian Hunter, Mick Ralphs, Overend Watts, Dale 'Buffin' Griffin and Verden Allen. Mainly known for the song 'All the Young Dudes' written for them by none other than David Bowie, but also such classics as 'Roll away the stone', 'All the way from Memphis' and 'Honaloochie Boogie'. They are the only band that Queen ever supported. Named after the Willard Manus novel of the same name.

Dude 1: What is possibly the best ever name of a band?
Dude 2: It's gotta be Mott the Hoople!

by mottthehoople March 11, 2010

47πŸ‘ 9πŸ‘Ž


hoople head

"There is a real place called Hoople, in North Dakota, spiritually not too far removed from the real Deadwood in South Dakota, though the two places are at opposite corners of the states. Hoople, however, is a tiny place even today (population about 300) and can hardly have been significant enough in 1876β€”even if it existed thenβ€”to be the source of a deprecatory comment."

"According to Professor Jonathan Lighter’s Historical Dictionary of American Slang, it probably derives from Major Hoople, who was a character in a once-famous cartoon strip entitled Our Boarding House, which featured the goings-on at Martha Hoople’s rooming establishment. It was written and drawn by Gene Ahern and began to appear in September 1921..."

"...It would not have been possible for Al Swearengen (Deadwood) to have used the word in 1876, 40+ years before Gene Ahern invented the character (Major Hoople) and a hundred years before it was first recorded in print. The producer and head of the scriptwriting team (HBO: Deadwood), David Milch, has been reported as saying in essence that he picked something out of the air to serve as a suitable insult without great concern for its etymology. It seems he must have heard it somewhere and it came conveniently back to mind while writing the scripts. It’s definitely an anachronism."

"Those damn writers on Deadwood don't research their slang words, but that doesn't stop Grandma from calling everyone a 'hoople head' anyways."

by The Chanel August 30, 2006

114πŸ‘ 49πŸ‘Ž


hoople-head

(Origin - unknown) n. - Hoople-head is probably derived from the word hoople, which means hobo or buffoon. See the 1960s novel by Willard Manus entitled, "Mott the Hoople".

As used in Deadwood, an HBO original series, "...bunch of f#$%ing hoople heads."

by Ken Serrine March 31, 2005

67πŸ‘ 31πŸ‘Ž


hoople head

I just spoke with my Uncle who is almost 90 years old. He said he recalls the word of Hoop Head being used when he was a young man. It's meaning was a "Drug Addict", could this be what Al is referring to since there is a lot of drug use on the show?

"Don't give those hoople heads any more drinks."

by Lanette May 5, 2008

47πŸ‘ 40πŸ‘Ž


hoople head

dervied from slang "hoople" which means a drunk; a drunkard

Source: HBO Original Series Deadwood

Give those hoople heads some drinks to calm them down.

by laura andora July 8, 2005

85πŸ‘ 91πŸ‘Ž


hoople head

(Origin - HBO series "Deadwood") n. - a derogatory name of unknown prior origin and unknown definition often stated by Al Swearengen in "Deadwood."

"Don't give those hoople heads any more drinks."

by shibby May 28, 2004

95πŸ‘ 103πŸ‘Ž


hoople head

I agree this term came from "Deadwood", but I don't think it means drunk or drunkard specifically. I think a more accurate definition would be clueless bastard or loser or lowlife, or particularly a combination of these.
In the show, these people often tend to be drunk or drinking, but not always.

Go buy the hoople heads a round of drinks.
Go get those hoople heads out of the street, before they get run over.

by Mr. Jan March 26, 2008

37πŸ‘ 37πŸ‘Ž