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dickie

[ US /ˈdɪki/ ]
[ UK /dˈɪki/ ]
NOUN
  1. a man's detachable insert (usually starched) to simulate the front of a shirt
  2. a small third seat in the back of an old-fashioned two-seater

How To Use dickie In A Sentence

  • But underneath it all, Dickie is a pussycat, a real nice fellow, who passed some of the same human qualities on to his son.
  • Dickie Best has lived in the same modest terraced house on the same working-class estate for the past 50 years.
  • BrewDog’s Jim Watt and Martin Dickie, with the world’s strongest beer. World’s Strongest Beer Heads to the U.S. | Impact Lab
  • And that's just why we must do everything we possibly can to prove that Dickie is the rightful heir, so that whether he has the title or I have it you and I may never have to reproach ourselves for having left a single stone unturned to give him his rights – whatever they are. Harding's Luck
  • He was a six-foot-five ex-Marine (though in Dickie's mind there was no such thing as an ex-Marine) with a booming voice. Dickie Lee Fox, R. I. P.
  • Next stop, hopefully, the light flyweight title held by Dickie Camacho.
  • The dominie was a rare visitor at the club after that, though he outlived poor Mr. Dickie by many years. Auld Licht Idylls
  • Also awarded an OBE is the Barnsley-born umpire Dickie Bird. US Open champion Rory McIlroy awarded MBE in New Year honours list
  • Dickie was sent away to school as soon as he was old enough to board.
  • Then as Whitley remained silent, he continued: "This here's th 'house whar' Dickie Falkner war 'borned; an' whar 'his mammy died; an' -- an ' That Printer of Udell's
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