'Duck Dynasty' family has roaring good time in Sunday' 'Celebrity Family Feud'

John Luke, Rebecca, Sadie, Korie, and Willie Robertson (left to right) appear in 'Celebrity Family Feud' on July 12, 2015 on ABC where the Christian family gave out the most surprising answers to the most unusual questions.(Instagram/Korie Robertson)

The Robertson family from "Duck Dynasty" had a roaring good time in "Celebrity Family Feud" on Sunday on ABC, where they went head to head against "Mike & Molly" star Katy Mixon and her family.

Willie, his wife Korie and their children Rebecca, Sadie, and John Luke represented the Robertsons, according to the Gospel Herald, and they had a lot of fun answering the most unusual questions.

When "Celebrity Family Feud" host Steve Harvey asked,: "Hey Sadie, c'mon now, if they made a sexy perfume for female dogs what might it smell like?"

Sadie admitted that she's feeling nervous, but when she replied, "A fire hydrant?" the teenage darling of "Duck Dynasty" generated a lot of laughter from the audience, including her family.

Her half sister Rebecca Lo also tried her luck answering the question and said, "Laundry detergent?" And the audience further erupted with laughter.

The show's matriarch Korie surprised the audience when the host told her to "name something of your wife's you might be holding in your hand." Everybody expected the Christian family to be very reserved and formal with their answers, but Korie answered "boob," much to the delight of the laughing crowd.

When it was her husband's turn to answer the question, Willie solicited a lot of "awws" when he answered "her heart."

In the end, the Robertson family lost to Katy Mixon and her crew, but the family did not have any regrets being in the show.

"It's a win win! At least we got some laughs... and thanks #familyfeudabc for still donating to The Hub," Rebecca tweeted, referring to their charity of choice. The game show donated $5,000 to Shreveport's Hub: Urban Ministry.

According to the non-profit organization's website, The Hub "exists to walk those in poverty through a process that gives them hope, friendship, community, a place where they belong and the skills needed to become self-sufficient, which brings them value and worth."