hokey-cokey - meaning and definition. What is hokey-cokey
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What (who) is hokey-cokey - definition

FOLK DANCE
Hokey-cokey; Okey-cokey; Hokey-Pokey; Hokey-pokey; The Hokey Cokey; Hoky poky; Hoky pokey; Hokey poky; Cokey cokey; The Hokie Pokie; The Hokey Pokey; Hokie Pokie; Hokey Cokey; Hokey cokey; Hokey pokey; Hokey tokey; The Hokey-Cokey; Cokey Cokey; Hinkumbooby
  • People doing the Hokey Cokey at an annual "Wartime Weekend" in the United Kingdom

Hokey Cokey         
The Hokey Pokey (Worldwide) also known as Hokey Cokey (United Kingdom, and the Caribbean) is a campfire song and participation dance with a distinctive accompanying tune and lyric structure. It is well known in English-speaking countries.
hokey-cokey         
¦ noun a communal song and dance performed in a circle with synchronized shaking of the limbs in turn.
Origin
1940s: perh. from hocus-pocus.
hokey-pokey         
¦ noun informal
1. dated ice cream sold by Italian street vendors.
2. US term for hokey-cokey.
Origin
C19: of unknown origin.

Wikipedia

Hokey Pokey

The Hokey Pokey, also known as Hokey Cokey in the United Kingdom and the Caribbean, is a campfire song and participation dance with a distinctive accompanying tune and lyric structure. It is well-known in English-speaking countries. It originates in a British folk dance, with variants attested as early as 1826. The song and accompanying dance peaked in popularity as a music hall song and novelty dance in the mid-1940s in the UK. The song became a chart hit twice in the 1980s. The first UK hit was by the Snowmen, which peaked at UK No. 18 in 1981.

Examples of use of hokey-cokey
1. They were doing the hokey cokey without even being drunk.
2. But – as the song says: "You do the hokey–cokey and you turn around.
3. Long may they join their hands together to make that hokey cokey circle turn.
4. Then she encouraged other delegates to join her, linking hands in an international version of the hokey–cokey.
5. Glenys Kinnock does the hokey–cokey during a 200,000 European Union junket to Barbados.