Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Many a "Li'l Abner" character ", 4 letters:
hick

Alternative clues for the word hick

Word definitions for hick in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. (context pejorative English) An awkward, naive, clumsy and/or rude country person. Etymology 2 vb. to hiccup

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. not very intelligent or interested in culture [syn: yokel , rube , yahoo , hayseed , bumpkin , chawbacon ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hick may refer to:

Usage examples of hick.

Thanks to the journalists who were onto Bill Hicks first: Len Belzer, Michael Barnes, Jack Boulware, Bill Brownstein, Lawrence Christon, Michael Corcoran, Bob Daily, Frank DiGiacomo, Robert Faires, Allan Johnson, Gerald Nachman, Mike Sager, Edith Sorenson, Michael Spies, Ernest Tucker, and Rick Vanderknyff.

Isaac Hicks is announcing that he gave thousands in cash to previous Dawkins campaigns.

The kind hick tourists bought, with jazzy headlines like HARRY SMITH HITS HOLLYWOOD, GIRLS TAKE TO THE HILLS!

I met nds he their oer th Hed thes always loore expens the hick yogurtr chntere, w.

Unnoted in his edge position, Sald gaped around like the hick country boy he was.

Hicks man said something to Hal Goode about the stretch of road between Union and Drake Eye Springs being narrow and rough as a washboard, I thought Old Man Hawk would explode!

I started barnstorming the hick towns, putting on my act in high school gymnasiums and farm auctions and anyplace else that would have me.

They were all speaking English, as a courtesy to the British officers present, who included a Captain of Horse named Billman, Colonel Sir Peter Hicks, and a Lieutenant Dundas, a young Scottish officer in charge of an ordnance survey party.

After a while Dork returned to the subject of porno pay, and porno percentages, until Hick confirmed the arrival of the tape of the test-fuck of Charisma Trixxx.

Hick Scorner immediately brings that redoubtable gentleman upon the stage, possibly slightly the worse for liquor, seeing that his first words are those of one on a ship at sea.

At this precise instant, however, old Pity, who has remained unnoticed, and who is unwarned by the fate of Hick Scorner, pushes forward with an idea of intervention.

As Hick Scorner never returns, the double conversion brings the play to a close.

Hick Scorner were shackled together in Newgate without money to pay for an upper room, how brazen-faced his lies were, how near he was to hanging, how ingenious were his excuses, and many other facts besides.

Hicks, and her little daughter nine years of age, were executed on the scaffold at Huntingdon in 1716, for the suppositious offences of raising storms and selling their souls to the devil.

John Hick, in an enlightening discussion of the problem of theodicy, has used this famous phrase of Keats to clarify the agonizing issue posed by the existence of evil in a world supposedly created by a God of love.