with a hook

English

Prepositional phrase

with a hook

  1. (UK, slang, obsolete) Appended to a statement to indicate that one does not believe it.
    • 1864, Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, John Leech, The Comic History of England (page 255)
      [] nor did the cruel sarcasm of "Oh, yes, with a hook!" — which some courtier would throw in — divert her at all from her humble purpose.
    • 1838, Actors by Daylight, volume 1, page 176:
      Mr. Bartley thinks himself a capital speech-maker. — (Yes — with a hook.)

References

  • John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary
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