NICK - 19 definitions found
Websters 1828 Dictionary 
Nick NICK, n. In the northern mythology, an evil spirit of the saters;
hence the modern vulgar phrase, Old Nick, the evil one. NICK,
n. [G. The nape; a continual nodding. The word seems to signify a
point, from shooting forward.] 1. The exact point of time required
by necessity or convenience; the critical time. 2. [G. knick, a
flaw.] A notch or score for keeping an account; a reckoning. 3. A
winning throw. NICK, v.t. 1. To hit; to touch luckily;
to perform by a slight artifice used at the lucky time. The just
reason of doing things must be nicked, and all accidents improved.
2. To cut in nicks or notches. [See Notch] 3. To suit, as lattices
cut in nicks. 4. To defeat or cozen, as at dice; to disappoint by some
trick or unexpected turn. NICK, v.t. [G. knicken, to flaw.] To
notch or make an incision in a horses tail, to make him carry it higher.
WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) 
nick
n 1: an impression in a surface (as made by a blow) [syn:
dent, ding, gouge, nick]
2: (British slang) a prison; "he's in the nick"
3: a small cut [syn: notch, nick, snick]
v 1: cut slightly, with a razor; "The barber's knife nicked his
cheek" [syn: nick, snick]
2: cut a nick into [syn: nick, chip]
3: divide or reset the tail muscles of; "nick horses"
4: mate successfully; of livestock
English Etymology Dictionary 
nick
"notch, groove, slit," 1483, nik, of unknown origin, possibly infl. by
M.Fr. niche "niche." Sense of "to steal" is from 1869. Nick of time is
first attested 1643, possibly from an old custom of recording time as it
passed by making notches on a tally stick, though the general sense of
"critical moment" is older (1577) than the phrase.
English Language Idioms 
Nick
nɪk See: FULL OF THE OLD NICK.
English Language Idioms 
nick
nɪk See: IN THE NICK OF TIME.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Edition (2003) 
nick I. noun
Etymology: Middle English nyke, probably alteration of
nocke nock Date: 15th century 1.
a. a small notch, groove, or chip b. a small cut or wound
c. a break in one strand of two-stranded DNA caused by a missing
phosphodiester bond
2. a final critical moment <in the nick of time>
3. slang British prison; also police station
4. British condition <in good nick>
II. verb Date: 1523 transitive verb
1. to jot down ; record 2.
a. to make a nick in ; notch, chip b. to cut
into or wound slightly <nicked himself shaving>
3. to cut short <cold weather, which nicked
steel and automobile output — Time> 4. to catch at
the right point or time 5. cheat, overcharge 6.
a. slang British arrest b. slang British
steal
intransitive verb 1. to make petty attacks ;
snipe 2. to complement one another genetically and produce
superior offspring
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
Nick n. Phrases and idioms: Old Nick the Devil. Etymology: prob. f. a pet-form of the name Nicholas
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
nick 1. n. & v. --n. 1 a small cut or notch. 2 Brit. sl. a a prison. b a police station. 3 (prec. by in with adj.) Brit. colloq. condition (in reasonable nick). 4 the
junction between the floor and walls in a squash court. --v.tr. 1 make a nick or nicks in. 2 Brit. sl. a steal. b arrest, catch. Phrases and idioms: in the nick of time only
just in time; just at the right moment. Etymology: ME: orig. uncert. 2. v.intr. Austral. sl. (foll. by off, in, etc.) move quickly or furtively. Etymology: 19th c.:
orig. uncert. (cf. NIP(1) 4)
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner\'s English Dictionary 
nick
(nicks, nicking, nicked)
1. If someone nicks something, they steal it. (BRIT INFORMAL)
He smashed a window to get in and nicked a load of silver cups...
= pinch
VERB: V n
2. If the police nick someone, they arrest them. (BRIT INFORMAL)
The police nicked me for carrying an offensive weapon...
Keep quiet or we'll all get nicked.
VERB: V n, get/be V-ed
3. If you nick something or nick yourself, you accidentally make a small cut in
the surface of the object or your skin.
When I pulled out of the space, I nicked the rear bumper of the car in front of me...
He dropped a bottle in the kitchen and nicked himself on broken glass.
VERB: V n, V pron-refl
4. A nick is a small cut made in the surface of something, usually in someone's skin.
The barbed wire had left only the tiniest nick just below my right eye.
N-COUNT
5. If you are nicked by someone, they cheat you, for example by charging you too much
money. (AM INFORMAL)
College students already are being nicked, but probably don't realize it.
= rip off
VERB: be V-ed
6. Nick is used in expressions such as 'in good nick' or 'in bad nick'
to describe the physical condition of someone or something. (BRIT INFORMAL)
His ribs were damaged, but other than that he's in good nick...
Tom's house is actually in better nick than mine.
PHRASE: v-link PHR
7. If you say that something happens in the nick of time, you are emphasizing that it
happens at the last possible moment.
Seems we got here just in the nick of time...
= just in time
PHRASE: usu PHR after v [emphasis]
English Explanatory Dictionary 
Nick
nɪk n. øOld Nick the Devil. [prob. f. a pet-form of the name Nicholas]
1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue 
NICK
Old nick; the Devil.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Nick \Nick\, n. [AS. nicor a marine monster; akin to D. nikker a
water spite, Icel. nykr, ONG. nihhus a crocodile, G. nix a
water sprite; cf. Gr. ? to wash, Skr. nij. Cf. Nix.]
(Northern Myth.)
An evil spirit of the waters.
Old Nick, the evil one; the devil. [Colloq.]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Nick \Nick\, n. [Akin to Nock.]
1. A notch cut into something; as:
(a) A score for keeping an account; a reckoning. [Obs.]
(b) (Print.) A notch cut crosswise in the shank of a type,
to assist a compositor in placing it properly in the
stick, and in distribution. --W. Savage.
(c) A broken or indented place in any edge or surface;
nicks in china.
2. A particular point or place considered as marked by a
nick; the exact point or critical moment.
To cut it off in the very nick. --Howell.
This nick of time is the critical occasion for the
gainger of a point. --L'Estrange.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Nick \Nick\, v. t.
To nickname; to style. [Obs.]
For Warbeck, as you nick him, came to me. --Ford.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Nick \Nick\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Nicked; p. pr. & vb. n.
Nicking.]
1. To make a nick or nicks in; to notch; to keep count of or
upon by nicks; as, to nick a stick, tally, etc.
2. To mar; to deface; to make ragged, as by cutting nicks or
notches in.
And thence proceed to nicking sashes. --Prior.
The itch of his affection should not then Have
nicked his captainship. --Shak.
3. To suit or fit into, as by a correspondence of nicks; to
tally with.
Words nicking and resembling one another are
applicable to different significations. --Camden.
4. To hit at, or in, the nick; to touch rightly; to strike at
the precise point or time.
The just season of doing things must be nicked, and
all accidents improved. --L'Estrange.
5. To make a cross cut or cuts on the under side of (the tail
of a horse, in order to make him carry ir higher).
Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001) 
nick n. [IRC; very common] Short for nickname. On IRC, every user
must pick a nick, which is sometimes the same as the user's real name or
login name, but is often more fanciful. Compare handle, screen name.
Soule\'s Dictionary of English Synonyms 
nick
I. n.
1. Critical point (of time), critical moment, fortunate conjuncture.
2. Notch, dent, dint, indentation, incision, score.
II. v. a.
Notch.
English Explanatory Dictionary (Synonyms) 
nick
nɪk n.
1 cut, notch, chip, gouge, gash, scratch, dent, indentation, flaw, mark, blemish, defect:
Be careful of that nick in the rim of the glass.
2 jail or Brit also gaol; police station: The police took him to the nick to help them
with their inquiries. --v.
3 steal, purloin, take, appropriate, make off with, Colloq pinch: Who nicked my biro?
4 arrest, nab, take in, Colloq collar: Alan was nicked for possession of marijuana.
5 nick off. depart, go or run off or away, take off, take to one's heels, show a clean
pair of heels, beat a (hasty) retreat, Colloq scarper, make tracks, beat it: The cops were
coming so I nicked off.
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 
195 Moby Thesaurus words for "nick":
Vandyke, appropriate, arrest, ascender, back, bastard type, beard,
beat it, belly, bevel, birthmark, black letter, blaze,
blaze a trail, blemish, blotch, body, brand, cabbage, cap, capital,
case, cast, caste mark, chalk, chalk up, check, check off,
checkmark, chip, chop, cicatrix, cicatrize, cleft, clout, collar,
counter, crap, craps, crena, crenellate, crenulate, crimp, cut,
dapple, dash, defect, define, delimit, demarcate, dent, depart,
depression, descender, discolor, discoloration, dot, earmark, em,
en, engrave, engraving, face, fat-faced type, feet, flaw, fleck,
flick, font, freckle, gash, gouge, graving, groove, hack, hatch,
hook, impress, imprint, incise, incision, indent, indentation,
indenture, italic, jag, jog, joggle, jot, kerf, knurl, lentigo,
letter, ligature, line, logotype, lower case, machicolate, macula,
majuscule, make a mark, make off with, make tracks, mark, mark off,
mark out, marking, mill, minuscule, mole, mottle, nab, nail,
natural, nevus, nip, nock, notch, patch, pencil, pepper, pi, pica,
picot, pinch, pink, point, police station, polka dot, prick, print,
punch, punctuate, puncture, purloin, riddle, roll, roman,
sans serif, scallop, scar, scarification, scarify, score, scotch,
scratch, scratching, script, seal, seam, serrate, shank, shot,
shoulder, slash, small cap, small capital, speck, speckle, splash,
splotch, spot, stain, stamp, steal, stem, stigma, stigmatize,
strawberry mark, streak, striate, stripe, take, take in, take off,
tattoo, tattoo mark, throw, tick, tick off, tittle, tooth, trace,
type, type body, type class, type lice, typecase, typeface,
typefounders, typefoundry, underline, underscore, upper case,
watermark
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