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Cute hoor is a Hiberno-English term used to describe someone who will do whatever it takes to achieve what they want. Usually a cute hoor will not break the law but it is seen as willing to bend and use the law, use people or use situations to come out on top, by pulling dishonest or misleading stunts en route. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
In this context cute means cunning, and is a clipped form of acute. The word hoor (pronounced hoo-r) is based on the English word whore, but in the term cute hoor has no sexual connotations. The term cute hoor is often used as a quasi-affectionate term, for someone whose utter unreliability and untrustworthiness is well known, seen through and treated almost as a joke. Then Irish Tánaiste Brian Lenihan was described as a cute hoor on a Late Late Show TV special about him in 1990 by some of his colleagues and friends, who recounted stories of his unreliability, including promising parents he'd get jobs for their children, then losing the piece of paper on which he'd recorded the details, or making 'spur of the moment' promises to voters during elections that would be forgotten as quickly as they were thought of. In Lenihan's case, his cute hoor image came back to haunt him when the question of his trustworthiness and reliability became a central issue in the 1990 presidential election, an election he sensationally lost to Mary Robinson. The Tánaiste (plural: Tánaistithe), or more formally An Tánaiste, is the deputy prime minister of the Republic of Ireland1. ...
Brian Lenihan (November 17, 1930 - November 1, 1995) was a senior Irish Fianna Fáil politician. ...
For the American late-night talk show presented by Tom Snyder, Craig Kilborn and Craig Ferguson, see The Late Late Show (CBS). ...
This article is about the year. ...
In the Irish presidential election in 1990 the Irish Labour Party let it be known that it would for the first time run a candidate. ...
Mary Robinson (Irish name Máire Bhean Mhic RóibÃn; born 21 May 1944) was the first female President of Ireland, serving from 1990 to 1997, and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, from 1997 to 2002. ...
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