What is the meaning of HICK. Phrases containing HICK
See meanings and uses of HICK!Slangs & AI meanings
Noun. A love bite. Also hickie. [Orig. U.S.]
Three-foot hickory stick used by freight trainmen to tighten hand brakes. Sometimes called sap or staff of ignorance
Hicky. A bruise on the neck resulting from sucking; it is evidence of intimate contact.
A kicker is a hick; a cowboy. they drive trucks with grill gaurds and wear wrangler jeans.
Hickey is American slang for a love bite.
Hicky. Sucking on the neck that makes a bruise from ear to ear.
Graeme Hick is London Cockney rhyming slang for the penis (dick, prick).
Hicksville is American slang for a backward provincial place.
A man that attraced sexually to sucking on the neck of the man or boy that he is with, giving a hicky.
You call them hickies - the things you do to yourself as a youngster with the vacuum cleaner attachment to make it look like someone fancies you!
Sucking on the heck that makes a bruise, it is evidence of intimate contact.
Hickory dickory dock is London Cockney rhyming slang for clock.
A man (perhaps a hick)
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Bruce Hick (born 1963), Australian rower Graeme Hick (born 1966), English cricketer Jacqueline Hick (1919–2004), Australian painter Jochen Hick (born
Hick is a 2011 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Derick Martini from a screenplay by Andrea Portes, based on Portes' 2007 novel of the
Graeme Ashley Hick MBE (born 23 May 1966) is a Zimbabwean-born former England cricketer who played 65 Test matches and 120 One Day Internationals for England
John Harwood Hick (20 January 1922 – 9 February 2012) was an English-born philosopher of religion and theologian who taught in the United States for the
and executive in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nicknamed "the Hick from French Lick" and "Larry Legend" Bird is widely regarded as one of the
Hick's law, or the Hick–Hyman law, named after British and American psychologists William Edmund Hick and Ray Hyman, describes the time it takes for a
Hick and Sons, subsequently Hick, Hargreaves & Co, was a British engineering company based at the Soho Ironworks in Bolton, England. Benjamin Hick, a
William Edmund Hick (1 August 1912 – 20 December 1974) was a British psychologist, who was a pioneer in the new sciences of experimental psychology and
Rarriwuy Hick (born 1990 or 1991) is an Aboriginal Australian award-winning actress, known for her roles in the television series Redfern Now, Cleverman
bubba, country bumpkin, hayseed, chawbacon, rube, redneck, hillbilly and hick. The Clampetts, in The Beverly Hillbillies TV series Cousin Eddie Johnson
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n.
The lesser spotted woodpecker (Dendrocopus minor); -- called also tapperer, tabberer, little wood pie, barred woodpecker, wood tapper, hickwall, and pump borer.
a.
Shaped like a worm; /hick and almost cylindrical, but variously curved or bent; as, a worm-shaped root.
n.
The lesser spotted woodpecker (Dendrocopus minor) of Europe.
n.
Alt. of Hickway
n.
An ament; a species of inflorescence, consisting of a slender axis with many unisexual apetalous flowers along its sides, as in the willow and poplar, and (as to the staminate flowers) in the chestnut, oak, hickory, etc. -- so called from its resemblance to a cat's tail. See Illust. of Ament.
n.
A shell, husk, or pod; especially, the outer covering of such nuts as the hickory nut, butternut, peanut, and chestnut.
n.
A species of hickory. See Pecan.
n.
A species of hickory (Carya olivaeformis), growing in North America, chiefly in the Mississippi valley and in Texas, where it is one of the largest of forest trees; also, its fruit, a smooth, oblong nut, an inch or an inch and a half long, with a thin shell and well-flavored meat.
a.
Consisting of several leaflets, or separate portions, arranged on each side of a common petiole, as the leaves of a rosebush, a hickory, or an ash. See Abruptly pinnate, and Illust., under Abruptly.
n.
The swamp hickory (Carya amara). Its thin-shelled nuts are bitter.
n.
An American clupeoid fish (Clupea mediocris), similar to the shad in habits and appearance, but smaller and less esteemed for food; -- called also hickory shad, tailor shad, fall herring, and shad herring.
n.
A member or follower of the "liberal" party, headed by Elias Hicks, which, because of a change of views respecting the divinity of Christ and the Atonement, seceded from the conservative portion of the Society of Friends in the United States, in 1827.
n.
An American longicorn beetle (Oncideres cingulatus) which lays its eggs in the twigs of the hickory, and then girdles each branch by gnawing a groove around it, thus killing it to provide suitable food for the larvae.
n. & v. i.
See Hiccough.
n.
The state or quality of being flexible; flexibleness; pliancy; pliability; as, the flexibility of strips of hemlock, hickory, whalebone or metal, or of rays of light.
n.
A species of hickory (Carya alba) whose outer bark is loose and peeling; a shagbark; also, its nut.
n.
The bitter-flavored nut of a species of hickory (Carya glabra, / porcina); also, the tree itself.
n.
An American tree of the genus Carya, of which there are several species. The shagbark is the C. alba, and has a very rough bark; it affords the hickory nut of the markets. The pignut, or brown hickory, is the C. glabra. The swamp hickory is C. amara, having a nut whose shell is very thin and the kernel bitter.
n.
The fruit of certain trees and shrubs (as of the almond, walnut, hickory, beech, filbert, etc.), consisting of a hard and indehiscent shell inclosing a kernel.
n.
A rough-barked species of hickory (Carya alba), its nut. Called also shellbark. See Hickory.
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