ick

See also: ICK and -ick

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪk

Interjection

ick

  1. An exclamation of disgust
    • 2014, Vicki Robin, Blessing the Hands That Feed Us: Lessons from a 10-Mile Diet:
      An aside for those who think “ick” about goat milk: If there are no billy goats around to arouse those sex hormones, goat milk does not taste “goat-y.
    Lizzie grabbed a frog out of the lake and put it in her hair! Ick!
Synonyms

Etymology 2

Back-formation from icky.

Noun

ick (plural not attested)

  1. (informal, uncountable) Something distasteful or physically unpleasant to touch.
    • 2011, J. Morgan, Southern Werewolf Chronicles Book Two: Were the Moon Don't Shine:
      Like it wasn't bad enough that I was soaked to the bone, now I had to lug an ick covered designer original across a puddle filled runway.
    • 2015, Chris Lynch, Killing Time in Crystal City, page 182:
      Did you get ick all over my things? Should I walk myself through a car wash on the way home?
  2. (informal) A feeling of revulsion.
    to have the ick
    • 1999 March 30, judy wieder, “Steve Kmetko's true hollywood story”, in The Advocate, page 36:
      And I was nodding, "Uh-huh," trying not to have an ick attack, worrying, Is my face giving something away?
    • 2017, Caragh M. O'Brien, The Keep of Ages, page 36:
      I wish none of this bothered me, but I feel this ick about Burnham and it isn't going away.
    • 2018, NJ Damschroder, Manifest Destiny:
      She'd woken up today with a general ick about doing this job, but every time she considered canceling and giving Hailey her money back, she couldn't do it.
    • 2022, Anna Williamson, Where is the Love?: The Honest Guide to Dating and Relationships:
      And as sad as that can be, we can't fake our feelings – if you've got the ick, you've got the ick.
    • 2024 March 12, J. Edward Moreno, quoting Kathryn D. Coduto, “Dating Apps Have Hit a Wall. Can They Turn Things Around?”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
      “People use dating apps, but I don’t know anyone who pays for it,” Ms. Wang said. In fact, she said that she would consider it an “ick” if she learned somebody was paying for a subscription.
  3. (slang) Anything moaned about; a gripe.
    • 1963, Thomas A. Erhard, The Electronovac Gasser: A Farce in Three Acts, page 45:
      How can you stand such an ick ?
    • 2009, Mary-Janice Davidson, Nina Bangs, Janelle Denison, Surf's Up:
      Of course, the idea of drinking blood is a total ick right now, but I suppose once you—
    • 2012, Doris Piserchia, The Dimensioneers:
      For the umpteenth time that day one of my fellow men regarded me with scorn. “You're so icky. Such an ick.”
    • 2013, Tara Taylor Quinn, It Happened on Maple Street:
      I keep thinking back to last Valentine's Day—I was such an ick—and you sent me that card.
    • 2022, Jamila Coleman, Surviving Seventeen… And The Years Leading Up To It, page 159:
      The thought of him and his obsessive begging for sex gave me a predatory vibe and was a total ick.

Adjective

ick

  1. (informal) icky; distasteful or unpleasant.
    • 2012, Sue Moorcroft, Dream a Little Dream:
      'It's a bit ick, to be honest, but Rochelle thought it would be funny. Last year we did dragon's diarrhoea, with Tia Maria and chocolate Angel Delight, but nobody would touch it.'
    • 2015, Candy J Starr, Bad Boy Rock Star: The Complete Story:
      He thought she would be an embarrassment. That kind of made me feel a bit ick.
    • 2021, Jacqueline Firkins, How Not to Fall in Love, page 201:
      There's nothing “ick” about him, but I'm not sure how to say that without sounding like I'm reciting lines from that terrible bodice ripper I took on Theo's practice date.

Derived terms

Noun

ick (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of ich (fish disease)

Anagrams

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Pronoun

ick

  1. Alternative form of ik: I

German

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Low German ick/ik, from Proto-Germanic *ek, from Proto-Indo-European *éǵh₂.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪk/
  • (file)

Pronoun

ick (conjunctive)

  1. (Berlin) I
    Ick liebe dir!
    I love you!

Usage notes

  • Also used by Johann Christian Trömer alias Jean Chrêtien Toucement, who wrote in a mixture of French and German, like how a French would (mis-)pronounce German.[1]

References

  1. Encyclopädie der deutschen Nationalliteratur oder biographisch-kritisches Lexicon der deutschen Dichter und Prosaisten seit den frühesten Zeiten; nebst Proben aus ihren Werken. Bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Dr. O. L. B. Wolff. Siebenter Band. Schmauss bis Z, 1842, p. 395, s.v. „Johann Christian Trömer“: „schrieb Tr. [= Trömmer] in einem Mischmasch von französisch und deutsch, wie es ungefähr ein Franzose sprechen würde“

Low German

Alternative forms

  • Ravensbergisch: eck, ek (used besides ick)
  • Münsterländisch: -k (enclitic; used besides ick)

Etymology

From Middle Low German ik, from Old Saxon ik, from Proto-Germanic *ek, from Proto-Indo-European *éǵh₂.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪk/

Pronoun

ick

  1. I (first person singular pronoun)
    ick schreev di en Breef
    I wrote you a letter
    Ick keem, ick seeg, ick wunn
    I came, I saw, I conquered. (veni, vidi, vici, attributed to Julius Caesar.)

Declension

In the dialect of Fritz Reuter:[1]

1st person2nd person3rd person
MasculineFeminineNeuter
Singular Nominative ickduheiseidat ('t)
Accusative midiemehrdat
Plural Nominative wijisei
Accusative unsjug (ju)
  • mien (possessive: my, mine)
  • sick (reflexive, for the 3rd person)

Possessive pronouns in the dialect of Fritz Reuter:

1st person2nd person3rd person
MasculineFeminineNeuter
Singular mindinsinehrsin
Plural uns'jugehr

References

  1. Alfred v. d. Velde: Zu Fritz Reuter! Praktische Anleitung zum Verständniß des Plattdeutschen an der Hand des ersten Kapitels des Fritz Reuter'schen Romanes: „Ut mine Stromtid“. 2nd ed., Leipzig, 1881, p. 15

Middle English

Pronoun

ick

  1. Alternative form of I

North Frisian

Pronoun

ick

  1. Alternative form of ik
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