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dickey
1[dik-ee]
noun
plural
dickeysan article of clothing made to look like the front or collar of a shirt, blouse, vest, etc., worn as a separate piece under another garment, as a jacket or dress.
a detachable linen shirt collar.
a bib or pinafore worn by a child.
a small bird.
a donkey, especially a male.
an outside seat on a carriage.
British.rumble seat.
dickey
2[dik-ee]
adjective
not working properly; faulty.
I'm fed up with this dickey air conditioner.
Dickey
3[dik-ee]
noun
James, 1923–97, U.S. poet and novelist.
William Bill, 1907–93, U.S. baseball player.
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of dickey1
Origin of dickey2
Example Sentences
But there were also hot pants over sheer logo tights and cropped white cotton dickeys.
Jane, after some hesitation, eventually decided that a white dickey would be just the thing for Mr. Banks, and she bought Robinson Crusoe for the Twins to read when they grew up.
Black pants, green blazer with matching beret, a white turtleneck dickey, and white galoshes to go over sneakers.
"Then will you tell me please why you always glance about so nervously? You look like a dickey bird in a yard full of cats, as Mr. Pope would say."
Even dickeys, shirtless collars once the purview of only the nerdiest of nerds, are getting a second look.
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