释义 |
[ hik-ok ] / ˈhɪk ɒk /
nounJames Butler "Wild Bill", 1837–76, U.S. frontiersman. Words nearby HickokHichens, hic jacet, hick, hickey, hick-joint pointing, Hickok, Hickok, Wild Bill, hickory, “Hickory, Dickory, Dock”, Hickory Hills, hickory pine Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for HickokHickok was acquitted, and it caused a public outcry of injustice. Not This Again: The Ghost of Past Injustices, From the Draft Riots to Trayvon|Herb Boyd|July 15, 2013|DAILY BEAST Hickok was on trial for manslaughter, and the judge gave the jury two instructions. Not This Again: The Ghost of Past Injustices, From the Draft Riots to Trayvon|Herb Boyd|July 15, 2013|DAILY BEAST And the case of James “Wild Bill” Hickok in 1865 bears some similarity to what occurred in the Zimmerman-Trayvon case. Not This Again: The Ghost of Past Injustices, From the Draft Riots to Trayvon|Herb Boyd|July 15, 2013|DAILY BEAST Wherefore, in an hour of aboriginal commerce Mr. Hickok encouraged a hirsute luxuriance in the name of trade. The Sunset Trail|Alfred Henry Lewis
"Wild Bill" Hickok was perhaps the best known "character" in Cheyenne in the 70's. The Prairie Schooner|William Francis Hooker Humanity talks fifty times where once it shoots, and Mr. Hickok was not ignorant of the race in its verbal ferocities. The Sunset Trail|Alfred Henry Lewis Hickok quietly declined to take the two remaining trials open to him. Frank Merriwell's Races|Burt L. Standish The message was a long one, by which Mr. Hickok deduced it to be important. The Sunset Trail|Alfred Henry Lewis
British Dictionary definitions for Hickok
nounJames Butler, known as Wild Bill Hickok. 1837–76, US frontiersman and marshal Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 |