The 270 occurrences of dick
View the definition of "dick" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,590 ~ ~ ~
"That means you'd like a real good husband,--a Tom, or a Dick, or a Harry," said Kate Sencerbox.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 281 ~ ~ ~
"The ivy and holly an' pine rukks never pookered a lav when our Saviour was gaverin' of his kokero, an' so they tools their jivaben saw (sar) the wen, and dicks selno saw the besh; but the ash, like the surrelo rukk, pukkered atut him, where he was gaverin, so they have to hatch mullo adree the wen.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 689 ~ ~ ~
Well, yeck divvus pre the wellgooro o' the graias prasters, my juvo dicked a boro _doll_ adree some hev of a buttika and penned, 'Dovo odoi dicks just like moro Wacker!'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,703 ~ ~ ~
We'll lel moro habben acai, and jal andurer by-an'-byus, an' then jal by ratti, so's the Gorgios won't dick us.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,680 ~ ~ ~
Adoi the rakli pukkered lesco it was for her rani ta jin kun'd welled a dick her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,771 ~ ~ ~
A tacho covva often dicks sar a hokkeny (huckeny) covva; an dovo's sim of a tacho mush, but a juva often dicks tacho when she isn't.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,983 ~ ~ ~
If you more the first sappa you dicks, tute'll more the first enemy you've got.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,989 ~ ~ ~
An' as he was beshin' alay a-mullerin' 'dree the weshes, he penned to his kokerus, "Avali, I dicks kenna that dovo's tacho what they pookers about morin' a sappa; for I never had kek worser ennemis than I've been to mandy's selfus, and what wells of morin' innocen hanimals is kek kushtoben."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,113 ~ ~ ~
Two other editions were published in 1884 by G. Routledge and Sons, and J. Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,809 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,839 ~ ~ ~
Dramatized by Albert Smith (_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,860 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,868 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,873 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,932 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,951 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,964 ~ ~ ~
(_Dicks' Standard Plays_, No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,529 ~ ~ ~
For a Dick, who, in consideration of the seriousness of recent events with which he had been directly concerned, enjoying a week's holiday, superintended the hunt from the banks; but he wearied of the work at length, and crossed the paddocks to join the men busy in the new shaft.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,025 ~ ~ ~
The two Dicks can have Scrub and Rasper.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,026 ~ ~ ~
Jack and Billy, boys, catch a hold of the bridles, or devil a ha'p'worth of ride and tie there'll be in at all, if them Dicks get the start--Shanks' mare will take you to Kells.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,571 ~ ~ ~
Her heart followed him, seeing him a Conqueror even in this, seeing him a robber with his rose-colored booty, a Robin Hood of the Garden, a Dick Turpin among the tuberoses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,054 ~ ~ ~
"But we can't have Leila and the General without them," she said to Barry, after a conversation with Leila over the telephone, "and it wouldn't seem like Thanksgiving without the Dicks."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,579 ~ ~ ~
Her heart followed him, seeing him a Conqueror even in this, seeing him a robber with his rose-colored booty, a Robin Hood of the Garden, a Dick Turpin among the tuberoses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,378 ~ ~ ~
Alan heard the dismissal in his voice and knew they were getting into a dick-swinging match.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,806 ~ ~ ~
Why, after lawlessly distributing your estates, possessed for thirteen centuries or more, by your illustrious families, whose antiquity and nobility, if equalled by any nation in the world, none but the immutable God of Abraham's chosen, though, at present, wandering and afflicted people, surpasses: After, I say, seizing on your inheritances, and flinging them among their Cocks, Hens, Crows, Rooks, Daws, Wolves, Lions, Foxes, Rams, Bulls, Hoggs, and other beasts and birds of prey, or vesting them in the sweepings of their jails, their Small-woods, Do-littles, Barebones, Strangeways, Smarts, Sharps, Tarts, Sterns, Churls, and Savages; their Greens, Blacks, Browns, Greys and Whites; their Smiths, Carpenters, Brewers, Bakers, and Taylors; their Sutlers, Cutlers, Butlers, Trustlers and Jugglers; their Norths, Souths, and Wests; their Fields, Rows, Streets, and Lanes; their Toms-sons, Dicks-sons, Johns-sons, James-sons, Wills-sons, and Waters-sons; their Shorts, Longs, Lows, and Squabs; their Parks, Sacks, Tacks, and Jacks; and, to complete their ingratitude and injustice, they have transported a cargo of notorious traitors to the Divine Majesty among you, impiously calling them the Ministers of God's Word."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 516 ~ ~ ~
Jacks_ and her sone _John_, _James Hargreaves_ of _Marsden_, _Miles_ wife of _Dicks_, _James_ wife, _Saunders_ sicut credit, _Lawrence_ wife of _Saunders_, _Loynd_ wife, _Buys_ wife of _Barrowford_, one _Holgate_ and his wife sicut credit, _Little Robin_ wife of _Leonard's_, of the _West Cloase_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 499 ~ ~ ~
Bilimbia sphaeroides (Dicks.)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 505 ~ ~ ~
Lichen sphaeroides Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 90 ~ ~ ~
Well, he wasn't just a dick any longer.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,357 ~ ~ ~
But I'd feel better if Strawn had taken my advice and set a dick to trail Sprague, to see that he keeps out of mischief.... All this, however, gets us no nearer to answering that eternal question--'Who?'"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,466 ~ ~ ~
Marian felt suddenly very poverty-stricken; there were no Dollies or Dicks for her to buy make-believes for.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,361 ~ ~ ~
"What's your trouble, Dick?" asked George, speaking, thought the servant, as if this Dick were the first of all Dicks and all men.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 975 ~ ~ ~
"O, a better one than that scapegrace of a Dick, of course!" said Mrs. Salsify, quickly; "but as to a better one than the colonel, I don't know about that.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 410 ~ ~ ~
Sam might have remained mystified, but at this juncture there proceeded from a bundle of rugs in the neighbourhood of the girl's lower ribs, a sharp yapping sound, of such a calibre as to be plainly audible over the confused noise of Mamies who were telling Sadies to be sure and write, of Bills who were instructing Dicks to look up old Joe in Paris and give him their best, and of all the fruit-boys, candy-boys, magazine-boys, American-flag-boys, and telegraph boys who were honking their wares on every side.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 323 ~ ~ ~
At length, when the meal was half-way through, Mr Huntingdon exclaimed abruptly,-- "I can't understand for the life of me how that fool of a Dick ever managed to get poor Forester into such a scrape.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 661 ~ ~ ~
It was some hours before he would go ashore, and when at last he did venture, it was with the reckless air of a Robert Macaire and a Dick Turpin rolled into one.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 489 ~ ~ ~
"I am going to get a few things, Ralph, which will not be heavy, and I wish to see Mr. Dicks about the calico he sold me which is not as good as he represented.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 515 ~ ~ ~
"From what I overheard down to Mr. Dicks' store, while I was doing my trading."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 518 ~ ~ ~
"And what did Will Dicks say?" questioned Ralph, eagerly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 530 ~ ~ ~
"I'll go down and question Will Dicks about it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 538 ~ ~ ~
When he reached Uriah Dicks' general store he found father and son in the act of putting up the shutters for the night.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 540 ~ ~ ~
"All right," returned Will Dicks, and, leaving his father to place the last of the shutters up, he led the way inside the store.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 548 ~ ~ ~
"What's the trouble?" asked Will Dicks, and his father stepped into the doorway to hear what the young bridge tender might have to say.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 550 ~ ~ ~
"But, can't you tell me what the trouble is?" insisted Will Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 551 ~ ~ ~
"Maybe Ralph intends to accuse Percy of obtaining it feloniously," put in Uriah Dicks, cautiously.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 553 ~ ~ ~
"I would rather not say, Mr. Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 558 ~ ~ ~
"It may save you some trouble, Mr. Dicks."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 576 ~ ~ ~
"But Percy gave me this bill," said Will Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 582 ~ ~ ~
"You can keep the bill for the present, Mr. Dicks----" "Of course I will!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 587 ~ ~ ~
"But where do we come in?" asked Will Dicks, who was cooler than his parent.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 608 ~ ~ ~
And with a thump of his hard and skinny fist on the counter, Uriah Dicks resumed the labor of closing up his establishment for the night.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 609 ~ ~ ~
"Nelson looked as if he had it in for Percy," soliloquized Will Dicks, as he brought in the few boxes and barrels that remained outside.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 616 ~ ~ ~
It was true that the bill in Uriah Dicks' possession was his own, yet how could he prove it, and thus get it once more into his possession?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 618 ~ ~ ~
"Perhaps I can make him confess how he obtained the bill, and make the amount good to Mr. Dicks."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 671 ~ ~ ~
"Percy had a twenty-dollar bill belonging to me and he passed it off on Mr. Dicks, the storekeeper."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 686 ~ ~ ~
"Well, it is my twenty-dollar bill that he gave to Mr. Dicks," said Ralph, doggedly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 700 ~ ~ ~
"He didn't have it changed into my bill--the one Mr. Dicks holds.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 751 ~ ~ ~
"You had my twenty-dollar bill, and you paid it over to Mr. Dicks," said Ralph.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 754 ~ ~ ~
"Who--who says I paid the bill over to Mr. Dicks?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 755 ~ ~ ~
"Will Dicks himself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 789 ~ ~ ~
Hooker, Dicks and the squire were close friends, and they constituted a majority of the village board, which controlled the bridge and other local matters.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 817 ~ ~ ~
Come with me to Uriah Dicks', and I'll tell him about the matter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 820 ~ ~ ~
Five minutes later the two stepped into Uriah Dicks' general store.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 824 ~ ~ ~
Both Squire Paget and the postmaster were surprised to see Ralph in conversation with Uriah Dicks and the young gentleman who was a stranger to them.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 827 ~ ~ ~
"Why, here is Squire Paget now!" exclaimed Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 851 ~ ~ ~
Uriah Dicks drummed uneasily upon the counter, where lay the bill in dispute.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 870 ~ ~ ~
Uriah Dicks caught the drift of the talk and looked perplexed, not knowing exactly upon which side to cast his opinion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 905 ~ ~ ~
She knew her son had gone off with Horace Kelsey to Uriah Dicks' store.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 914 ~ ~ ~
"But if Uriah Dicks and the postmaster and the squire are against you, they can put you out.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 996 ~ ~ ~
They were the squire, the postmaster, and Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,343 ~ ~ ~
Ralph had been paid off at the squire's office in the village, and now he made his way to Uriah Dicks' store, to settle up the family account.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,344 ~ ~ ~
"How much do we owe you, Mr. Dicks?" he asked, as he walked up to Uriah, who was poring over a very dirty ledger.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,353 ~ ~ ~
"We are, Mr. Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,371 ~ ~ ~
"Thank you, but I wouldn't work for that, even if I cared to work for you, Mr. Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,386 ~ ~ ~
To Uriah Dicks all such matters were questions of dollars and cents, not of justice.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,768 ~ ~ ~
"Hallo, in a new business, eh?" remarked Uriah Dicks as he placed one of the bills on the latter's front counter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,773 ~ ~ ~
"That is a matter of opinion, Mr. Dicks."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,965 ~ ~ ~
"I guess we are that," put in Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,977 ~ ~ ~
"Jess where you dropped it a couple of hours ago," returned Uriah Dicks, eagerly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,000 ~ ~ ~
"Robbin' the post office!" cried Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,021 ~ ~ ~
"I guess Benjamin Hooker ain't taking your word for it," grumbled Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,113 ~ ~ ~
"That's what Uriah Dicks says."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,130 ~ ~ ~
"But that's enough," put in Uriah Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,803 ~ ~ ~
"There be a good many Dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,755 ~ ~ ~
You've got some reputation as a dick, but I reckon it's all a fake.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 305 ~ ~ ~
There are a number of German woodcut illustrations to illustrate the German translations; some rude woodcuts to illustrate Dicks' edition: ditto to Penny edition.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 94 ~ ~ ~
A dick something it is.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 57 ~ ~ ~
"You look like a Dick."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,735 ~ ~ ~
"Here you, Louie," he bade one of them, "jump to the telephone and notify a certain party to have me mouthpiece at Headquarters by the time I kin get there with these two dicks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,165 ~ ~ ~
There were two "Dicks" at Blue Aloes, and Christine, not knowing it, had been guilty of a grave injustice to Richard Saltire!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,309 ~ ~ ~
"It doesn't matter to me who interests him, but I can't have any of my wards being romantic over a Dick Turpin," he replied lightly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 645 ~ ~ ~
It is hardly fair to say that they go over with their pockets full of letters of introduction to their American cousins, who receive them with open arms and unlimited hospitality, and then that these Toms, Dicks, and Harrys bring back in exchange notes for columns of ridicule and abuse of their Transatlantic friends.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 867 ~ ~ ~
One combatant, I declared, "swallowed the gruel rammed at him as if it were mother's milk," the lads "had enough blood on tap to run a sizeable slaughterhouse"; then a British fighter "swallowing a lobster salad on top of a whiskey sour, with a dose of prussic acid by way of dessert"; and references to my knowledge of the "Freds," "Toms," or "Dicks" of the Sporting Press of London, and to my familiarity with "Charlies," "Fitzs," and "Jims" of the "Magic Circle," were astounding.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,440 ~ ~ ~
Take some _labeled_ characters out of our humorists, let them be put together into one piece, to speak only as labeled: let there be a Dominie with nothing but "Prodigious!" a Dick Swiveller with nothing but adapted quotations; a Dr. Folliott with nothing but sneers at Lord Brougham;[432] and the whole will pack up into one of Miss Burney's novels.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,152 ~ ~ ~
"I'm just looking out some old clothes for poor Mrs Dicks," she said.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,153 ~ ~ ~
"Do you mean _our_ Mrs Dicks?" asked Penny.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,157 ~ ~ ~
"Our Mrs Dicks" had been her mother's maid, and after she married the children had often been to visit her, and considered her a great friend.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,159 ~ ~ ~
Penny was fond of Mrs Dicks, and it seemed dreadful to think that she must now bring up six children on nothing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,169 ~ ~ ~
Nurse rolled up a tight bundle of clothes and left the room without answering, and Penny, with her frowning little face bent over her work, went on thinking about Mrs Dicks and her six children.