English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Noun

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boogie (plural boogies)

  1. (informal, US) A piece of solid or semisolid mucus in or removed from the nostril cavity.
    Synonyms: (US) booger, (UK) bogie
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Etymology 2

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Noun

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boogie (plural boogies)

  1. (informal) A style of swing dance.
  2. (informal) Any relatively energetic dance to pop or rock music.
    Come on girls, let's get on the dancefloor and have a boogie!
  3. (skydiving, informal) A large, organised skydiving event.
  4. (slang, ethnic slur) A black person.
    • 1966, Liberation: An Independent Monthly, Volumes 11-12, page 66[1]:
      in front of the White House during the crisis over admission of James Meredith to the Univeristy of Mississippi, we were counterpicketed by five members of the American Nazi Party. One of them carried two placards: one saying "Who Needs Niggers?" and the other "Back to the Trees, Boogies!" Finally a passerby, incensed by the sight of the Stars-and-Stripes being carried alongside the Nazi Swastika, assaulted one of the Nazis
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Verb

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boogie (third-person singular simple present boogies, present participle boogying or boogieing, simple past and past participle boogied)

  1. (intransitive) To dance a boogie.
    • 1979, Lou Reed (lyrics and music), “I Want to Boogie With You”, in The Bells:
      Don't you know I wanna boogie with you / Hey, I wanna boogie with you / Down on the corner
    • 2007 May 28, Tim Murphy, “A Little Older and a Bit Creakier, Skaters Boogie on in Central Park”, in New York Times[2]:
      Mr. Nichols said that with permits, equipment storage fees and other expenses, it costs the association about $7,000 for a season of boogieing.
  2. (intransitive, informal) To move, walk, leave, exit.
    Let's boogie on out of here.
    • 1999, Thom Nicholson, 15 Months with SOG: A Warrior's Tour, page 75:
      Again, the entire line stopped, and again, by the time I got there the enemy had boogied, having accomplished their mission: to delay and harass us
    • 2007, Blaize Clement, Curiosity Killed the Cat Sitter, page 69:
      The waiter boogied back with the drinks and did a little shimmy before he boogied off.
    • 2002, Douglas H. Chadwick, A Beast the Color of Winter: The Mountain Goat Observed, page 149:
      Once in a while just coming upon a tilted snowbank in the midst of a feeding area is enough to send a band boogieing away downhill.
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Spanish

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Noun

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boogie m (plural boogies)

  1. boogy