Small bottles filled with smuggled hooch were often referred to as "flasks" or "hip flasks". These bottles were discreetly carried to avoid detection during the Prohibition era, when the sale and consumption of alcohol were illegal in the United States.
Some popular slang terms from the 1920s include "bee's knees" (meaning excellent), "cat's pajamas" (meaning stylish or impressive), and "hooch" (meaning bootleg liquor).
No, "hooch" is slang for alcohol.
"Hooch" is the term for a temporary or improvised tent. Calling a tent a "hooch" implies that it's small and poorly made.
Her full name is Rolanda Hooch.
hocch died at the age of 12
The meaning of "Hooch" depends upon what context the word is used such as Hooch may mean some kind of alcohol related beverage or Hooch can mean a tent or thatched hut in a military context .
Slang words of the 1920s included "bee's knees" (meaning excellent), "cat's pajamas" (meaning stylish), "hooch" (meaning liquor), and "flapper" (meaning a fashionable young woman). These words captured the spirit of the Roaring Twenties and the societal changes happening at that time.
Gerrit de Hooch died in 1679.
Assuming the question is relating to the 1989 Tom Hanks film: Turner & Hooch, Hooch's (a French Mastiff) real name was Beasley.
it's Hooch, not Mooch. Madam Rolanda Hooch.
Hooch - 1977 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG