The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . Country HtcA-—howcame you, Friend, to be a Stildier*/ Steele, Grief Ala-Mode, iv. 1. hick^ II. and r. See hie. hickery (hiker-i), a. [Origin obscure.] III-iinfured. [North. Eng.] hickery-pickery (hiker-i-pikir-i), n. A pop-ular version of hicra-piera. The leddy cured me wl some hickery-pickery. Scull, old Mortality, viii. hickett (hiket), H. [Also hickot; imitative, likehieeuji. hiekoek, F. hoquet, etc.: see hiccup.]Same as hiccup. he hocquet ausaiiglot [F.], the
The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . Country HtcA-—howcame you, Friend, to be a Stildier*/ Steele, Grief Ala-Mode, iv. 1. hick^ II. and r. See hie. hickery (hiker-i), a. [Origin obscure.] III-iinfured. [North. Eng.] hickery-pickery (hiker-i-pikir-i), n. A pop-ular version of hicra-piera. The leddy cured me wl some hickery-pickery. Scull, old Mortality, viii. hickett (hiket), H. [Also hickot; imitative, likehieeuji. hiekoek, F. hoquet, etc.: see hiccup.]Same as hiccup. he hocquet ausaiiglot [F.], the Ilickol, or yexing. Xomcnclator. It is also of good signality, according to that of Hip-pocrates, that sneezing cnretii the hieket. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., iv. 9. hickett (hiket), (. /. [< hieket, «.] To hiccup. hickhallf, . Same as hiekiroll. hickinglyt, olr. In a hicking or hacking man-iicf: ;ij)[ili<d to a cough, ropscll. hick-joint (hikjoiut), a. In masonrit. tin epithetapplied to a kind iif pointing in which mortaris inserted between the courses and joints of awall and made smooth or level with the Branch and Fruit of Hickorya), a, male flower; b, female hickock Mckockt (hikok), n. [Also hicJicoel-, hichcocJc;a varied reiiupl. of hie, hivkS (ef. Pers. hikiik,hukkiik): seehie, Jiick^, hie-cu}).] Same as A hiccup. _ A;/;- The voice is lost in hiekockK, ami ttie breath is stifled wittl siglis. Howell, rally of [Beasts, p. 23. hickol (hikol),II. Seehickwall. hickory (hiko-ri), II.; pi. hick-ories (-riz).[Formerly alsohiccorij, and inearlier formpohickery; anAmer. Ind. name. AnotherInd. name is fas-katoiii,\ North Amer-ican tree be-longing to the genus Carija, of the nattiral or-der Jlighniflcic. It has alternate pinnate leaves, nostipules, and moncecious flowers, the sterile iu catkins, thefertile solitary or la small clusters or spilies. The fruitis a di-y drupe with a bony nut-shell, containing a orthotropous seed. See Carya. Fopl
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