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A nice wee puzzle for Hooray Henry when he comes back next term."
'A Hooray Henry?' he queried, but not with any real degree of interest.
Tim was a 'Hooray Henry' and was known for persistently failing his law exams.
"It's all rather Hooray Henry.
The comedy is good, too, particularly in a scene in which Gerda encounters a Hooray Henry wedding party.
Most of them were harmless, cheery, Hooray Henry types from the Home Counties and City boys from the mid-Eighties boom.
Some students went the literary route, with corduroy jackets and afternoon play readings by the river, while others chose the "Hooray Henry" persona and braying in restaurants.
But the official line is north Cornwall - my own part of the world - where he may have been a Hooray Henry around Rock and Daymer bay in his teen years.
In the Hooray Henry country we live in, everybody should aspire to buying and selling imaginary money in the Square Mile, so that they may keep 10% of it and send their children to a private school.
The expression was roughly the female equivalent to the term "Hooray Henry", used to describe brash, upper-class young English public school boys, although this term is not geographically restricted and is used all over the UK.
In which time I have been a victim of the clique set, if your face doesn't fit, your training can wait; also the 'Hooray Henry' brigade, the difference between the men and the boys is the price of their toys, types.
The brand experienced a revival following a 2003 advertising campaign featuring a humorous classic upper-class Hooray Henry called Harry Fitzgibbon-Sims (portrayed by Alexander Armstrong) with the catchphrase It's Pimm's O'clock!
He was the second son of an extremely wealthy family of brewers, an effete upper-class playboy of the type known in London society as a 'Deb's Delight' or "Hooray Henry', and he had been with her at the Rolling Stones concert four days ago.