释义 |
mick noun- an Irish person or Irish-American US, 1850
- It’s funny, micks like us fighting each other. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 52, 1947
- Tell me, Dadier, what do you think of kikes and mockies and micks and donkeys and frogs and niggers, Dadier. — Evan Hunter, The Blackboard Jungle, p. 209, 1954
- Iris, meanwhile, was going steady with a young mick named Mike Behan[.] — Charles Raven, Underworld Nights, p. 24, 1956
- ACTION: Spics! PEPE: Micks! — West Side Story, 1957
- You Irish liar, O’Mally, so you was shooting it all the time. You big Mick. — Graeme Kent, The Queen’s Corporal [Six Granada Plays], p. 89, 1959
- Agnew has pointed out that it’s a land of opportunity for anyone, whether he’s a Mick, as Polack or a Jap. — Playboy, p. 62, February 1969
- No sooner we was on the bus back, we had to bail out the windows on to Amsterdam Avenue, a mob of micks was comin’ through the door after us. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 9, 1975
- A bus, you goddamn whiskey Mick cop, you lost a stolen bus. — 48 Hours, 1982
- Who would’ve ever throught a Mick from Columbus Avenue would someday own a layout like this? — Elmore Leonard, Glitz, p. 52, 1985
- I don’t know about some goddamn slum mick from Brooklyn you decided to marry... — Robert Campbell, Boneyards, p. 224, 1992
- a car that is used in Ireland before being imported into, and reregistered in, England – the documentation on such a vehicle gives the impression of a much newer car UK
Car dealers’ term. - — Woman’s Own, 28 February 1968
- a prisoner US
- — Hyman E. Goldin et al., Dictionary of American Underworld Lingo, p. 139, 1950
- the vagina NEW ZEALAND
- — David McGill, David McGill’s Complete Kiwi Slang Dictionary, p. 84, 1998
- a young bull, especially if unbranded AUSTRALIA, 1894
A shortening of MICKEY- While the fight was at its height, a little mick jumped out of the mob and covered her. — Sam Weller, Old Bastards I Have Met, p. 143, 1979
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