On the Skeptics StackExchange you quite often read users referring to certain things and practices as "woo". What is the origin of this word? How did it come to be synonymous with skeptics?
etymology - What is the origin of the term "woo"? - English Language ...
Woo and woo-hoo (and variations like yahoo, yee-haw, and yippee) indicate excitement. (Woot, also spelled w00t among an online in-crowd, is a probably ephemeral variant.)
3 I've seen "wee woo" used for all types of sirens, including ambulance and fire: Wee-woo! Wee-woo! It was the unmistakable sound of a police car siren. — Time Sneak
At first I thought it was called wooing/wooed. But then I checked the Free Dictionary: woo (w) v. wooed, woo ing, woos v.tr. 1. To seek the affection of with intent to romance. 2. a. To seek to achieve; try to gain. b. To tempt or invite. 3. To entreat, solicit, or importune. v.intr. To court a woman And realized it was not. What's the correct ...
single word requests - Verb to refer to people yelling "wooh ...
3 I like the one suggested by the UD: Wee woo: is the sound a siren makes. It is used in jest, to make fun of police cars, fire engines, ambulances, anything with a siren, really. Popularized by short films. Anyway I don't think there is an 'official' one.
Really so, on the Barnet. And the combination was Old Spice on the German, little bit of Old Spice, tiddly-winky-woo, with the Brylcreem, bee's knees." It's at the 6:33 mark. Since they talk about a Cockney Bible afterwards, I assume this to be Cockney. And a rather contrived bit at that.